I think its rather simple. they fell over and went very still. In Shakespeare's day the actors sometimes concealed a bladder filled with animal blood under their clothes so they could appear to bleed when they were stabbed.
Nope. Who would of wrote all his plays if he wasn't alive?
Nope. Who wrote all the plays if he wasn't ever alive?
Christopher 'Kit' Marlowe was stabbed to death in a tavern and many rumours have developed surrounding his death as he was supposedly associated with Francis Walshingham, Queen Elizabeth I's spymaster.
Christopher Marlowe was a famous English playwright who died in 1593 at about the same time as Shakespeare's first works came out. Some historians believe in the Marlovian theory, which suggests that Marlowe faked his death and began writing under the name William Shakespeare. However, most do not; Shakespeare was already writing before Marlowe's death and had a different style, and the coroner's records are quite clear that Marlowe died of a knife in the eye. Pretty hard to fake that. Shakespeare (like most theatre people of the day) was a Marlowe fan, and made occasional references to his work.
No. You see, what we start with is a number of publications of play scripts as well as contemporary anecdotes and diary entries about those plays. These plays were said to have been written by William Shakespeare. Was there a real person called William Shakespeare? Yes, no question. Was he a real actor? Yes, lots of people seem to have recorded that fact. Did he act in the same company that the publishers of the plays did? Yes, unquestionably. Was his name associated with these plays as well as various poems during his lifetime as the author? Yes, and by a lot of different people, too. So Shakespeare is not a fake in the sense that Lemony Snicket is a fake--the author of his plays and poems did not invent a fake person to name as the author. William Shakespeare was a real person, and a well-known one to boot. It is one thing to use a fake name as a pen-name (like Lemony Snicket) if your real name is Daniel Handler, but another altogether for Daniel Handler to write A Series of Unfortunate Events by J.K. Rowling. You can be sure that Ms. Rowling would raise a stink about that. And in fact the real William Shakespeare did raise a stink about people publishing other people's poetry and claiming that it was written by him.
Nope. Who would of wrote all his plays if he wasn't alive?
Nope. Who wrote all the plays if he wasn't ever alive?
Capulet at the fake death of Juliet. "Death lies on her like an untimely frost, upon the sweetest flower of all the field.
No as he was a real person.
Depends what you mean by fake. They are all real plays; they can be and are actually performed. They are not closet plays to be read and not performed. Are the stories in the plays true stories? Some of them are based on historical fact--the histories, Macbeth, and the Roman plays. If you mean by "fake" that the stories are not stories about Shakespeare's personal life, then indeed they are completely unrelated to his personal life. It is a matter of great frustration to many people that this is so, but it is certainly so. He did not write his plays because his son died, because he had a toothache or because Anne wanted a new dress; he wrote them around good stories that he had heard or read and which he thought would sell. Period.
Christopher 'Kit' Marlowe was stabbed to death in a tavern and many rumours have developed surrounding his death as he was supposedly associated with Francis Walshingham, Queen Elizabeth I's spymaster.
The Fake Death Experience was created in 2004.
William did fake his death so that Harold thought he had won
You mean, I suppose, during his lifetime. Shakespeare was well-known for his writing during his lifetime. One of the best examples of this is in Francis Meres's book Palladis Tamia in 1597, in which he listed all of the best writers in England at that time, and mentioned Shakespeare as a playwright, and as a composer of sonnets and epic poems. One reason we know that Shakespeare made a name for himself was that although the earliest of his plays were published anonymously, after a while the publishers thought it would sell more copies if the plays were attributed to Shakespeare. Later, they started adding Shakespeare's name to stuff that he hadn't written, which shows that his name was a real selling point. Otherwise why try to sell fake Shakespeare plays and poems?
no.
faces of death is fake in most seens but the one with the car on the road is real every other is as fake as Texas chainsaw masicer
Christopher Marlowe was a famous English playwright who died in 1593 at about the same time as Shakespeare's first works came out. Some historians believe in the Marlovian theory, which suggests that Marlowe faked his death and began writing under the name William Shakespeare. However, most do not; Shakespeare was already writing before Marlowe's death and had a different style, and the coroner's records are quite clear that Marlowe died of a knife in the eye. Pretty hard to fake that. Shakespeare (like most theatre people of the day) was a Marlowe fan, and made occasional references to his work.