everyone. but mainly benedick and beatrice
Elizabethan audiences enjoyed the plays they watched for pretty much the same reasons as people do today, which is why Elizabethan plays keep getting produced. They were probably quicker to understand what they heard than we are, and were better listeners (modern people expect a story to be shown to them, not told to them). Elizabethans particularly enjoyed wordplay that used puns and alliteration: that is why Shakespeare's Love's Labour's Lost was much more popular then than now. A lot of the wordplay in Much Ado is still accessible to modern audiences.
Much Ado About Nothing is a play, not a poem. It also is not a sermon, and so is not intended to convey a message, only to entertain.
Much Ado was created in 1995.
In Elizabethan English which is a form of Modern English, exactly the same language I am writing in now, ado means and meant "talk, palaver, busy activity, fuss and bother." It comes from "to do", with "to" abbreviated to "a" as it frequently was in this dialect. In modern usage, you most often see it in a sentence like "Without more ado she went down to the mall and bought herself a bathing suit."
Much Ado About Mousing was created in 1964.
The Wonderly Way - 2013 Much Ado About Much Ado About Nothing 2-2 was released on: USA: 6 June 2013
Much Ado About Nothing is a play. It is not a novel.
The Production Budget for Much Ado About Nothing was $8,000,000.
Much Ado About Nothing - opera - was created in 1901.
Much Ado has always been a popular play.
Much Ado About Nothing grossed $22,549,338 worldwide.
There was much ado over the celebration.