Every classical drama theater in the English speaking world and that is not counting translation's.
In some places you would pay a penny and stand on the ground watching the play
Some famous lines from Shakespeare's plays that are still commonly used today include "To be, or not to be: that is the question" from Hamlet, "All the world's a stage" from As You Like It, and "To thine own self be true" from Hamlet.
His plays were greatly affected by the society he lived in. Some of his plays were banned due to the content that the plays contained.
Plutarch,Raphael Holinshed,Saxo Grammaticus, Arthur Brooke, and Giovanni Boccacio
Many people believed in the supernatural. Shakespeare reflects this in some of the scenes in his plays.
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.
De Vere died in 1604 before some of the plays, including The Tempest and Macbeth, were written.
Would you throw away a brick made of pure gold just because it's 400 years old? I didn't think so. Some things in art are great and never stop being great.
They were published in book form, although not at Shakespeare's request or even with his knowledge in some cases. These books, even though they were printed almost 400 years ago and in some cases more than 400 years ago, still exist and can still be read. Thank God they were not only available as Kindles or some such rapidly obsolescent format.
It depends what you think is distasteful. Did Shakespeare make dirty jokes? Absolutely. Some plays, like Romeo and Juliet, Measure for Measure, and Troilus and Cressida, have more than others.
Yes, they are still preformed there are even some movie about the plays that he made.
in some places