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The acting company that Shakespeare was with for most of his working life changed its name to the king's men in 1603 when King James succeeded to the throne and took over sponsorship of the company.
They didn't. The changes of name (there were actually three of them) took place because of changes in their patron. The first change was because the patron died and they got a new patron, the second because the new patron got a new title, and the third because the king took over as the patron. Neither Shakespeare nor any other member of their company had any say in the company's name, which was simply the name (or title) of the patron with "Men" or "servants" behind it. One thing's for sure: they were never called "Shakespeare's Men." Not only was Shakespeare not in a position socially to be a patron, but he was not even the leader of the company.
The second counsel was held in Vaiśālī, so the patron would most likely have been the ruler of that city's region.
The second child born to the Shakespeare's was actually twins: Judith or Hamnet.
In the early part if his career, possibly 1590 to 1594, Shakespeare may have been associated with Queen Elizabeth's Men, Lord Strange's Men, and/or Pembroke's Men as an actor and/or a playwright. In '94 he joined Lord Hunsdon's Men as a founding shareholder. When Hunsdon became the Lord Chamberlain of England, the company took that name. When he died, the company reverted to the original name until young Hunsdon was also appointed Lord Chamberlain, when the company resumed it second name. In 1603, upon the ascension of James I, the company took on the title of its new patron and became the King's Men. The King's Men continued under that name until Parliament closed all of the theaters in 1642.
he was an important king because he and shakespeare had gotten along and during the time of his plays he had much support in the theatre and the people that were performing and he was apart of the kings men group that shakepseare had
I suppose some of them must have been. "Say, Anne, how would you like my second-best bed?" for example.
We are not exactly sure which acting company Shakespeare started his career with: Queen Elizabeth's Men, Lord Strange's Men, Suffolk's Men, Pembroke's Men or Derby's Men have all been mentioned as possible acting companies Shakespeare worked for before 1594. He may have worked for all of them for all we know. But what we do know is that in 1594 Shakespeare was made a partner in a new company made up mostly of actors from Lord Strange's men, and it is this company which Shakespeare worked with for the next twenty years or so, although the personnel and even the name of the company changed from time to time. It is known usually as the Lord Chamberlain's Men or the King's Men, but it was throughout the same company. So it is impossible to say which acting group was Shakespeare's second, but it is certain that the Chamberlain's/King's Men was his last.
supporter, second, patron, promoter, subscriber, helper, benefactor
The cast of The Second Part of Henry the Sixth - 1983 includes: Peter Aldwyn as Second Company Sean Bartley as Second Company Peter Benson as King Henry VI Paul Benzing as Second Compnay Brian Binns as Second Company Gerald Blackmore as Second Company Stephen Brigden as Second Company Gerald Broadley as Drummer Anne Carroll as Duchess of Gloucester Paul Chapman as Duke of Suffolk Michael Cogan as Second Company Ron Cook as Richard Plantagenet Stuart Cox as Second Company Philip Croskin David Daker as Duke of Buckingham Derek Farr as Lord Say Mark Fletcher as Second Company Julia Foster as Queen Margaret Nigel Gomm as Trumpeter David Goodwin as Second Company Barry Grantham as Second Company Nick Hall as Second Company Bernard Hill as Duke of York Pat Keen as Margery Jourdain Angus Kennedy as Second Company Hamish Kerr as Second Company Hus Levant as Second Company Mark Lindsay Chapman as Second Company David Ludwig as Second Company Peter Macklin as Second Company Oengus MacNamara as Young Clifford Frank Middlemass as Cardinal Beaufort Stephen Paine as Drummer Brian Protheroe as Edward Plantagenet Martin Rutledge as Second Company Peter Searles as Second Company Dikran Tulaine as Second Company Peter Wyatt as Sir Humphrey Stafford
The cast of The First Part of Henry the Sixth - 1983 includes: Peter Aldwyn as Second Company Sean Bartley as Second Company Peter Benson as King Henry VI Brian Binns as Second Company Gerald Blackmore as Second Company Brenda Blethyn as Joan La Pucelle Stephen Brigden as Second Company Anthony Brown as Duke of Burgundy David Burke as Duke of Gloucester Michael Byrne as Duke of Alencon Paul Chapman as Earl of Suffolk Michael Cogan as Second Company Stuart Cox as Second Company Philip Croskin as Second Company Brian Deacon as Earl of Somerset Mark Fletcher as Second Company Julia Foster as Margaret, Daughter of Reignier David Goodwin as Second Company Barry Grantham as Second Company Alex Guard as Young John Talbot Nick Hall as Second Company Paul Jesson as Second Messenger to the King Angus Kennedy as Second Company Hamish Kerr as Second Company Hus Levant as Second Company David Ludwig as Second Company Peter Macklin as Second Company Frank Middlemass as Cardinal Beaufort Trevor Peacock as Lord Talbot Brian Protheroe as Bastard of Orleans Nick Reding as Keeper Martin Rutledge as Second Company Ian Saynor as Charles the Dauphin Peter Searles as Second Company Dikran Tulaine as Second Company Alan Vicars as Second Company Peter Wyatt as Woodville, Lieutenant of the Tower
First of all "Patron Saints" are Catholic, not Greek Myth. Second, Odysseus wasn't a god or a Saint; he was the King of Ithaca.