Their season starts in April and includes the Shakespeare plays Hamlet, Titus Andronicus, Antony and Cleopatra, Julius Caesar, The Comedy of Errors, Much Ado About Nothing and King Lear. Plus they are doing All's Well that Ends Well translated into Gujarati and Midsummer Night's Dream in British Sign Language.
They are also doing the non-Shakespeare plays Pitcairn, Dr. Scroggy's War, Holy Warriors and The Last Days of Troy. There is also a play in Spanish, Punishment without Revenge.
They are planning to take their production of Hamlet, which opens the season on the anniversary of Shakespeare's death, on a two-year tour to all 205 countries in the world.
The last play of the season is Pitcairn, which opens September 22.
For more details see their web page at the attached link
William Shakespeare's plays were performed in 'The Globe Theatre'.
the Globe is the theatre at which most of his plays were originally performed
William Shakespeare
William shakespeare performed hi plays there
It is The Globe where William Shakespeare had his plays performed.
William Shakespeare's plays were so well done that Queen Elizabeth asked him to have them performed in her castle. It is not said that Shakespeare's plays were performed in a different public theatre.
The first Globe Playhouse existed in London, in England between 1599 and 1613. Many of Shakespeare's plays were performed on the Globe theatre for the first time. He was a part owner of the Globe as well as being a partner in the company that performed there.
They performed plays written by Shakespeare.
Shakespeare's plays were performed in the Globe
he prefromed all the plays at the globe theather
I think that every one of Shakespeare's plays were performed in the Globe. But I might be mistaken.
The globe theatre was where William Shakespeare performed his plays. the first globe was burnt down during one of his plays but the second was built on top of it. It is now a model to remember William Shakespeare by and i think it is also a museum where people can go and visit it. It still stands by the river Thames to this day!