To write them: ink, paper, penTo perform them: actors, props, theatresTo think them up: imagination, hard work, and other people's plots.
No, women were not on his plays.
Yes he did.
I use Sparknotes.com
blank verse
Voltaire did not directly use Shakespeare as a source for his plays, but he was influenced by Shakespeare's work and admired his dramatic style. Voltaire criticized Shakespeare's use of emotional excess and his unconventional narrative techniques, yet he recognized the impact of Shakespeare on the theatrical landscape. In his own plays, Voltaire sought to blend classical traditions with new ideas, drawing from various influences, including Shakespeare's emphasis on character and human emotion.
No, simply.
I'd use the word entertaining.
Shakespeare and his contemporaries often used blank verse (unrhymed iambic pentameter) for the dialogue in their plays.
Storms appear most prominently in the plays The Tempest and King Lear.
His plays were based on stories he had read or plays he had seen. Shakespeare rarely created an original plot--he just made pre-existing plots so much better.
he used samalayuca books
Shakespeare wrote Shakespeare's plays. Other theories may be entertaining but have no evidence to support them.