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There have always been different versions of the plays. The version of King Lear in Quarto form is quite different from that in the Folio, and parts of it are not dramatically compatible. The First Quarto, Second Quarto and Folio versions of Hamlet are likewise different. The reason for this is probably that Shakespeare and the company fiddled with the plays all the time--revising them and adding topical material. The only copy of Macbeth which has come down to us suggest that it was a late revision with new material added by another playwright, probably Middleton.

This process did not stop after Shakespeare's death. During the Restoration, the plays were modified to suit the taste of the times: King Lear was given a happy ending for Cordelia; new songs were written for Macbeth's witches. Parts the actors didn't like were cut and they wrote new speeches to make the characters' motivations more simple and direct.

More recently, theatrical taste prefers shorter plays, so performances of the plays tend to cut away less crucial parts to shorten the runtime. This is particularly true of film versions. And people continue to fiddle with the scripts by moving dialogue from one part of the play to another (see Welles's Macbeth or Zeffirelli's Hamlet for examples)

Modern approaches often are less respectful to Shakespeare's text than at previous times. Something like Kurosawa's Ran not only is entirely in Japanese, but introduces new characters and different motivations to the framework of Shakespeare's play King Lear. It is in effect a new script. The same is true for "modern language versions" which retain some elements of the plot structure of Shakespeare's plays but totally change the dialogue and character motivations. These are essentially totally new plays using the story line of Shakespeare's plays. However, since Shakespeare almost always stole his story lines from someone else, they are the least characteristic parts of his plays. The part that is uniquely Shakespeare, and which makes his plays great--his poetic language--has been removed in such versions.

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