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William Shakespeare
William Shakespeare (1564 - 1616): BIOGRAPHY etc.
Details about William
Shakespeare's life are sketchy, mostly mere surmise based upon court or other
clerical records. His parents, John and Mary (
William no doubt attended
the local grammar school in
Shakespeare's life can be
divided into three periods: the first 20 years in
John Shakespeare had
suffered financial reverses from William's teen years until well into the
height of the playwright's popularity and success. In 1596, John Shakespeare
was granted a coat of arms, almost certainly purchased by William, who the next
year bought a sizable house in
Shakespeare probably left school at 15, which was the norm, and took some sort of job, especially since this was the period of his father's financial difficulty. Numerous references in his plays suggest that William may have in fact worked for his father, thereby gaining specialized knowledge.
At some point during the
"dark years," Shakespeare began his career with a
When, in 1592, the Plague closed the theaters for about two years, Shakespeare turned to writing book-length narrative poetry. Most notable were "Venus and Adonis" and "The Rape of Lucrece," both of which were dedicated to the Earl of Southampton, whom scholars accept as Shakespeare's friend and benefactor despite a lack of documentation. During this same period, Shakespeare was writing his sonnets, which are more likely signs of the time's fashion rather than actual love poems detailing any particular relationship. He returned to play writing when theaters reopened in 1594, and published no more poetry. His sonnets were published without his consent in 1609, shortly before his retirement.
Amid all of his success,
Shakespeare suffered the loss of his only son, Hamnet, who died in 1596 at the
age of 11. But Shakespeare's career continued unabated, and in
A paint of the "Globe Theatre",
built in 1603
When Queen Elizabeth died
in 1603 and was succeeded by her cousin King James of
Incredibly, most of Shakespeare's plays had never been published in anything except pamphlet form, and were simply extant as acting scripts stored at the Globe. Only the efforts of two of Shakespeare's company, John Heminges and Henry Condell, preserved his 36 plays (minus Pericles, the thirty-seventh) in the First Folio. Heminges and Condell published the plays, they said, "only to keep the memory of so worthy a friend and fellow alive as was our Shakespeare". Theater scripts were not regarded as literary works of art, but only the basis for the performance. Plays were a popular form of entertainment for all layers of society in Shakespeare's time, which perhaps explains why Hamlet feels compelled to instruct the traveling Players on the fine points of acting, urging them not "to split the ears of the groundlings," nor "speak no more than is set down for them."
Present copies of Shakespeare's plays have, in some cases, been reconstructed in part from scripts written down by various members of an acting company who performed particular roles. Shakespeare's plays, like those of many of the actors who also were playwrights, belonged to the acting company. The performance, rather than the script, was what concerned the author, for that was how his play would become popular-and how the company, in which many actors were shareholders, would make money.
William Shakespeare died on
April 23, 1616, and was buried two days later in the chancel of
DATE'S SUMMARY: (About his life)
Timeline of Shakespeare's Plays
Short plot
of
The play tells of the
scandalous affair between the Roman general
Octavius
Caesar (later renamed to Augustus Caesar, son of the murdered Julius Caesar),
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