At the start Shakespeare was at his best, and wrote some of his most famous plays including Hamlet and Julius Caesar. His last play was written in 1613, the year the globe theatre burnt down.
Shakespeare's working life was between 1592 and 1613. The first date is an approximation based on Greene's remarks in his Groatsworth of Wit.
The Globe Theatre, which was not Shakespeare's by the way, since he was only a part owner, burned down on June 29, 1613 during a performance of Henry VIII.
The Globe or the Blackfriars. He had shares in both.
1599 and was burned in 1613.
At the start Shakespeare was at his best, and wrote some of his most famous plays including Hamlet and Julius Caesar. His last play was written in 1613, the year the globe theatre burnt down.
Shakespeare's working life was between 1592 and 1613. The first date is an approximation based on Greene's remarks in his Groatsworth of Wit.
It Got Burnet down I Think.........
The Globe Theatre in London was built in London in 1599 by the company associated with William Shakespeare. It was burned to the ground on June 29, 1613.
Acting. Shakespeare was an actor in the Lord Chamberlain's Men/King's Men who were based out of the first Globe during its entire existence, from 1599 to 1613. It burned down at about the same time Shakespeare retired.
The Globe Theatre, which was not Shakespeare's by the way, since he was only a part owner, burned down on June 29, 1613 during a performance of Henry VIII.
The Globe or the Blackfriars. He had shares in both.
1599 and was burned in 1613.
Shakespeare's Globe Theatre, originally built in 1599, was a pivotal venue for his plays. It was destroyed by fire in 1613 during a performance of "Henry VIII" but was quickly rebuilt in 1614. The theatre continued to operate until it was closed in 1642 by the Puritans and later demolished in 1644. A modern reconstruction, known as "Shakespeare's Globe," was opened in 1997 near the original site in London.
The Globe Theatre was the home of the Lord Chamberlain's Men (afterwards known as the King's Men) from 1599 to 1642. Shakespeare was associated with this group until his retirement in 1613, which means he played at the Globe more than any other theatre.
There was no "Shakespeare Theatre" in either 1592 or 1613. Shakespeare did not own any part of any theatre until 1599. In 1599, Shakespeare's associates Richard and Cuthbert Burbage, who did own a theatre, wanted to build a new theatre to solve some of their legal problems. They therefore arranged to use parts of their old theatre to build the new one, but they needed some cash to buy supplies. Enter Shakespeare and some other guys who put some money into the Burbages' new theatre in exchange for a cut of the profits. It was this new theatre, the Globe Theatre, which burned down on June 29, 1613 during the performance of one of Shakespeare's plays. To the people back then, the Globe would have been the "Burbage Theatre" since Richard Burbage was more famous than Shakespeare and actually owned a large chunk of it.
The Globe Theatre was built by Shakespeare's group, the Lord Chamberlain's Men. It burned down in 1613, was rebuilt in 1614 and was shut down due to the Black Plague in 1642.