He played Hamlet, and is listed to have been arguably one of the best.
No, the leading actor in the king's men (earlier the Lord Chamberlain's Men) was Richard Burbage. Burbage was the first man to play such roles as Hamlet, Macbeth, Othello and King Lear. Shakespeare, it is said, played supporting roles, generally of a "kingly" nature, such as the ghost in Hamlet, Prince Escalus in Romeo and Juliet, or King Henry IV in the two parts of that play.
The line appears in "Hamlet". In the play, Hamlet's father had been murdered, and his brother had usurped the throne. The ghost of Hamlet's father demands that Hamlet take revenge on his terrible murder. Torn between his word for vengeance and his conscience, he ponders wether or not he should go on living, hence, the "To Be Or Not To Be" soliloquy.
If Shakespeare used a real person as a model for Romeo, we do not know who it might be. However, since Shakespeare knew that the part would be played by Richard Burbage, since Burbage was the leading actor in the company and Romeo is the lead role in the play, he may have had Burbage in mind when he wrote the part, and designed it so that Burbage would make a good job of it.
Falstaff, who appears in three plays (the two parts of Henry IV and The Merry Wives of Windsor) has more lines than any other Shakespearean character, with 471. Hamlet has the most in a single play (probably because when you conflate the two versions of the play it is way longer than any other play)
the play is called Hamlet and was writing by William Shakespeare.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamlet
No, Richard Burbage did not play Macbeth. Macbeth is a character in William Shakespeare's play "Macbeth," and the role was likely performed by Burbage's contemporary, William Shakespeare himself. Richard Burbage was a renowned actor in Shakespeare's company, the Lord Chamberlain's Men.
Richard Burbage. Burbage was the actor who played Hamlet when it was first performed. Shakespeare often wrote his characters with the actors he expected to play them in mind. It is therefore reasonable to assume that Shakespeare wrote the part in such a way that Burbage would shine in it. The Hamlet story was an old and well-known one; there was even an older (now lost) play on the story. So the basic idea of the story was there before Shakespeare got hold of it; he just tweaked it.
No, the leading actor in the king's men (earlier the Lord Chamberlain's Men) was Richard Burbage. Burbage was the first man to play such roles as Hamlet, Macbeth, Othello and King Lear. Shakespeare, it is said, played supporting roles, generally of a "kingly" nature, such as the ghost in Hamlet, Prince Escalus in Romeo and Juliet, or King Henry IV in the two parts of that play.
The first recorded actor to play the character of Macbeth on stage was Richard Burbage, a prominent actor in William Shakespeare's theater company. Burbage performed the role around the year 1606 at the Globe Theatre in London.
Hamlet, in Hamlet with 1495 lines followed by Richard III in Richard III with 1171 and Iago in Othello with 1098
The most popular actor in Shakespeare's company was Richard Burbage. Burbage was recognized as the second-most famous actor in London at the time after Ned Alleyn. Shakespeare wrote all his leading roles after 1594 for Burbage to play.
The line appears in "Hamlet". In the play, Hamlet's father had been murdered, and his brother had usurped the throne. The ghost of Hamlet's father demands that Hamlet take revenge on his terrible murder. Torn between his word for vengeance and his conscience, he ponders wether or not he should go on living, hence, the "To Be Or Not To Be" soliloquy.
If Shakespeare used a real person as a model for Romeo, we do not know who it might be. However, since Shakespeare knew that the part would be played by Richard Burbage, since Burbage was the leading actor in the company and Romeo is the lead role in the play, he may have had Burbage in mind when he wrote the part, and designed it so that Burbage would make a good job of it.
Probably Richard Burbage. We do not have very many records of early performances of the play and the one we have does not mention actors. However, we know that Burbage was the company's main actor and so he probably played the lead role.
As a play the first actor to ever play Romeo was Richard Burbage around 1595. As for movies: 1908- Godfrey Tearle 1964- Leonard Whiting 1996- Leonardo DiCaprio
In 1964 there was a celebrated production of Hamlet starring Richard Burton and directed by John Gielgud, which ran at the Lunt-Fontanne theatre on Broadway.
Falstaff, who appears in three plays (the two parts of Henry IV and The Merry Wives of Windsor) has more lines than any other Shakespearean character, with 471. Hamlet has the most in a single play (probably because when you conflate the two versions of the play it is way longer than any other play)