I think because England was under the rule of Queen Elizabeth.
There is no official record of Shakespeare's birth but there is a record of his baptism on 26th April 1564. It was (and still is) customary for a baptism to take place soon after birth, so he was probably born sometime in April of that year. In England, his birthday is celebrated on St. George's Day, 23rd April.
This would be Richard Burbage, the second greatest actor of Shakespeare's day.
An actor
Troupe
In Europe of Shakespeare's day, the most respected people culturally were probably the Italians who were ahead of the rest of the continent in embracing Renaissance ideas.
No Fear Shakespeare is not a play - it is a translation of most of Shakespeare's Elizabethan works such as Macbeth, Hamlet, Romeo and Juliet, King Lear and others into understandable, modern day English. An actual title of a play would be more helpful in finding types of betrayal.
Sonnet 18, also known as "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?" was written by William Shakespeare in the 16th century, during the Elizabethan era.
In Shakespeare's day, theatres were called playhouses. In fact, the name of the first venue for the Lord Chamberlain's Men was The Theatre Playhouse.
To help you, here is a famous quotation from Shakespeare: "Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow creeps in this petty pace from day to day." (Macbeth) Here is another one: "Call on me tomorrow, and you will find me a grave man." (Romeo and Juliet) Basically, "tomorrow" is "tomorrow"--not surprising really, since Elizabethan English is not a different language from our own.
There isn't one, because "restored" implies that there was an ancient wreck which could be fixed up. All of the theatres which existed in Shakespeare's day were destroyed many centuries ago. There was great excitement when they found part of the foundations of the Rose theatre under an old apartment block. Sam Wanamaker, and American actor and Shakespeare enthusiast, was astonished to find that there was no physical monument of any kind in London to the great Elizabethan playhouses that Shakespeare, Burbage, and Alleyn acted in. He therefore started a fundraising campaign to raise money to build a totally new Elizabethan playhouse, using as much as possible the same techniques as were used back then. With the assistance of architect Theo Crosby, he was successful and the new theatre, called Shakespeare's Globe Theatre, opened in 1997. It is a totally amazing structure and well worth the visit, but it is not restored. It is totally new from the ground up. It does not even stand on the site of any Elizabethan playhouse.
chocolate pie... but that was 3 years ago...
Apart from Shakespeare, Christopher Marlowe, Ben Jonson, Thomas Kyd, John Webster, Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher, Thomas Middleton, Thomas Dekker and John Heywood were famous playwrights.