All modern interpretations of Shakespeare are based on the original plays. I am assuming that "modern interpretations" means either 1) a scholarly article interpreting the meaning of the plays, or 2) a recent performance of the play, or 3) a recent film using the dialogue of the play. Those are what are implied by the word "interpretation".
If you are talking about some story, play or film which uses some element of the Shakespeare play but has a new storyline or dialogue, the similarity between the new story, play or film will be different in each case. In some cases it will be as remote as "Oh, this is a story about a man with daughters, so it's just like King Lear."
Words. Shakespeare has them. Ballet does not.
They got married. So did he. They were human beings. So was he. That's about it. As you can see, Shakespeare did not draw any of his plots or stories from his own life. That's why it doesn't really matter that we know so little about his life.
No.
Shakespeare did his writing between 1590 approximately and 1613.
Shakespeare wrote his works between 1590 (approximately) and 1613 when he retired.
Words. Shakespeare has them. Ballet does not.
They got married. So did he. They were human beings. So was he. That's about it. As you can see, Shakespeare did not draw any of his plots or stories from his own life. That's why it doesn't really matter that we know so little about his life.
It is the distance between the parallels
There is no direct evidence to show where Shakespeare got his ideas. Many of his plays were adaptations from older plays, from histories, or from extant stories. Very few of Shakespeare's plays we original plots, though his adaptations usually included new or re-imagined characters. For his poetry, there is some speculation that he drew from his private life for the sonnets, writing about his dead son, his mistress, and no doubt he drew on personal experience the way any artist does to mine his/her own emotional life, but there is no evidence that there are direct parallels between the sonnets and Shakespeare's private life. If you actually mean ides, that is the Roman designation for the 15th of the month.
No.
that don't make sense
Elba
All parallels of every latitude 23.5 degrees or less, both north and south.
The road parallels the river. She is investigating if there are any obvious parallels between the two cases.
You can find Antarctica between 60 and 90 degrees South Latitude.
Nothing.
Elba