Introduction
It wasn't his training: Shakespeare left school at age 15, and his contemporary Ben Johnson said Shakespeare had “little Latin and less Greek.” It wasn't where he was born: Stratford is still a pretty small town even today. It wasn't a long career: Shakespeare wrote all of his great works in about a twenty-five-year span and died relatively young at 52. It wasn't even his story ideas: the Bard adapted almost all his plots from known sources. No, what's impressive about Shakespeare is that his genius seems to have come from nowhere except himself. He penned comedies, tragedies, and lyric poems; and his mastery of language, character psychology, and emotion combined to make him the greatest writer in English.Essential Facts
- Shakespeare married Anne Hathaway when he was 18. She was eight years older and gave birth six months after the wedding...suggesting they may have had to get married.
- Shakespeare’s will leaves his “second best bed” to his wife. Who got the best bed—and why?
- In 1890, Eugene Schieffelin released eighty starlings into New York’s Central Park because they were mentioned in Shakespeare’s Henry IV Part I. There are now hundreds of millions of starlings in America.
- Actors try to avoid saying “Macbeth” in a theater. Tradition (superstition?) says that it brings bad luck, so actors call it the “Scottish play” instead.
- Some say that Shakespeare didn’t write any of the works staged under his name. This theory became popular in the nineteenth century, and some say you can find clues to the real author (Francis Bacon?) all through the works...if you read closely enough.
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- All's Well That Ends Well Study Guide (eNotes)
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- Cymbeline Study Guide (eNotes)
- Hamlet Study Guide (eNotes)
- Hamlet Video Study Guide
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- Henry VI, Part 1 Study Guide (eNotes)
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- Henry VI, Part 3 Study Guide (eNotes)
- Henry VIII Study Guide (eNotes)
- Julius Caesar Study Guide (eNotes)
- King John Study Guide (eNotes)
- King Lear Study Guide (eNotes)
- Love's Labor's Lost Study Guide (eNotes)
- Macbeth Study Guide (eNotes)
- Measure for Measure Study Guide (eNotes)
- Much Ado about Nothing Study Guide (eNotes)
- Othello Study Guide (eNotes)
- Othello Video Study Guide
- Richard II Study Guide (eNotes)
- Romeo and Juliet Study Guide (eNotes)
- Shakespeare's Sonnets Study Guide (eNotes)
- Sonnet 19 Study Guide (eNotes)
- Sonnet 29 Study Guide (eNotes)
- The Comedy of Errors Study Guide (eNotes)
- The Merchant of Venice Study Guide (eNotes)
- The Merry Wives of Windsor Study Guide (eNotes)
- The Taming of the Shrew Study Guide (eNotes)
- The Tempest Study Guide (eNotes)
- The Two Gentleman of Verona Study Guide (eNotes)
- The Two Noble Kinsmen Study Guide (eNotes)
- The Winter's Tale Study Guide (eNotes)
- Timon of Athens Study Guide (eNotes)
- Titus Andronicus Study Guide (eNotes)
- Troilus and Cressida Study Guide (eNotes)
- Twelfth Night Study Guide (eNotes)
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