Romeo and Juliet
Either Romeo and Juliet, Julius Caesar, A Midsummer's Night's Dream, or Hamlet. Those are around the most popular. Basically this is because these are the ones most taught in schools. People who went to schools where The Merchant of Venice, Twelfth Night or Macbeth are taught will naturally include these on their lists.
five acts
The censor, who in Shakespeare's day was the Master of the Revels, Edmund Tilney.
All sorts of monarchs went to see shakespeares plays including Elizabeth the first and king Edward the firstMostly men and nobles. Quick fun fact: Men were only allowed to be in Shakespeare's plays back in his day.
No, his play more tragic and full with suspension.
Shakespeare started writing plays in about 1590 and retired from doing it in 1613. He seems to have been popular and successful at all stages of his career.
No. We know of at least one, Sir Thomas More, that he and his collaborators could not get past the censors.
Most people think that it's "Romeo and Juliet" but they are probably wrong. Some people think it was "The Tempest" because it came toward the end of his career. But whatever you say it is a complete guess because there is absolutely no evidence that Shakespeare liked any of his plays better than any other. For all we know, his favourite play was Cymbeline.Shakespeare never talked about what his favourite anything was. By allusions in the plays we know that he was familiar with the plays of Marlowe, and he was certainly familiar with the classical plays of Seneca, Plautus and Terence, but that doesn't make them favourites of his.
Yes. Works of art don't become obsolete. The plays of Shakespeare possess all (or most) of the ingredients of a good work and will continue to do so until humans evolve past the point of appreciating such.Yes.his plays explain that life back then was no different from today.
All of the plays called histories are about the Kings of England and the political events of their reign, although some of the kings, like Henry IV and Henry IV, are not major characters in the plays that bear their names.
John Heminges was a big fan of his fellow-actor Shakespeare's writing which is why he was one of the people who arranged for all of his plays (well, most) to be published in one big fancy volume.
Shakespearean plays are all considered relevant because they portray human issues which never seem to change no matter how much time passes. Love, greed, and betrayal are all things in Shakespeare's plays and they are issues with which human beings worldwide still contend.
All seasons.