Othello
Cordelia is the youngest daughter of the title character in Shakespeare's play " King Lear".
Shakespeare did not title his sonnets.
Well, Shakespeare wrote only one play with a character called Romeo in it, and it was called Romeo and Juliet. You can probably guess the answer from the title of the play.
Umm, Macbeth. The title is a hint, although it doesn't always work out that way in Shakespeare.
Clearly Shakespeare thought that Antonio was a more important character than Shylock. Or Bassanio and Portia for that matter.
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Cordelia is the youngest daughter of the title character in Shakespeare's play " King Lear".
In Shakespeare's Hamlet, the title character vows to avenge his father's death.
No, there is no character called Nicola in any of Shakespeare's plays. You are probably misled because there is a short story called The Two Gentlemen of Verona by AJ Cronin which has a character in it called Nicola. However, Cronin's story has nothing in common with Shakespeare's play The Two Gentlemen of Verona apart from the title.
They are both plays by Shakespeare. In both the title character ends up dead. They are both set at approximately the same historical time. In both the title character is a ruler.
Shakespeare did not title his sonnets.
Well, Shakespeare wrote only one play with a character called Romeo in it, and it was called Romeo and Juliet. You can probably guess the answer from the title of the play.
Umm, Macbeth. The title is a hint, although it doesn't always work out that way in Shakespeare.
Because it was in his source. Shakespeare got the story either from an earlier play (the title of which Henslowe recorded as Hamlet) or from Belleforest's book Histoires Tragiques, in which the character is called Amleth.
Clearly Shakespeare thought that Antonio was a more important character than Shylock. Or Bassanio and Portia for that matter.
Apparently it is. Shakespeare's source was called Rosalynde. He changed the title when he made it into a play.
In the fictitious novel Shakespeare's Scribe by Gary Blackwood, the character Widge, the scribe of the title, says "Because of my skill with a pen, it was my job to copy out the sides, or partial scripts from which each actor learned his lines."