There is nobody called "Tatiana Shakespear" If your question is about the play A Midsummer Night's Dream, then possibly you are asking about Titania, who, being a queen, is treated respectfully by everyone except her husband the king and his crony Puck. If this does not answer your question, you should try to ask it more clearly next time.
Generally (but not always!) Shakespeare's characters who spoke in blank verse are the lower-status characters. Think of which characters are not as important, then compare that to some of their speech in Romeo and Juliet.
Shakespeare wrote about every possible type of character.
Shakespeare wrote a lot of plays - here are some of his more well known characters: Hamlet, Ophelia, King Lear
Othello.
The Witches.
Olga Peters Hasty has written: 'Pushkin's Tatiana' -- subject(s): Tatiana, Characters
Generally (but not always!) Shakespeare's characters who spoke in blank verse are the lower-status characters. Think of which characters are not as important, then compare that to some of their speech in Romeo and Juliet.
The contrast between the appearance and the reality of the characters gives Shakespeare's characters depth.
Shakespeare's heroines were his female characters.
Shakespeare did not write a work called "The Banquet".
Actually Shakespeare did not "write about" any characters at all, except when other characters are talking about them. Shakespeare created his characters by writing words for them to say and actions for them to do. He also created an awful lot of characters; if you pick up a copy of any Shakespeare play whatsoever, and look at the beginning where it lists the characters in that play (the Dramatis Personae), you will see the names of more than seven characters, guaranteed. Twelfth Night, a comedy, has fourteen characters, Macbeth, a tragedy, has about 28, the First Part of Henry VI, a history, has 37. Another hint: the names of 23 of Shakespeare's characters appear in the titles of his plays.
Shakespeare wrote about every possible type of character.
None. Shakespeare did not "model his characters" on individuals. Since he borrowed most of his plots, the characters came with them. Shakespeare broadened the characters in the stories he found but rarely invented any. Many of his characters are stock characters or similar to them. (Maria in Twelfth Night, for example, is a soubrette) Falstaff if perhaps an exception. He appears to be entirely Shakespeare's character, and in making him Shakespeare drew no doubt on many real knights of his acquaintance. If Shakespeare had even heard of an artist who wandered from job to job around France and Italy a century earlier, his plays show no sign of such a character.
They are characters in Shakespeare's As You Like It.
Shakespeare wrote a lot of plays - here are some of his more well known characters: Hamlet, Ophelia, King Lear
Some of Shakespeare's most famous characters include Romeo, Juliet, MacBeth, Puck, and Othello.
i think it means high in efforts status