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Shakespeare’s life

  • Apr 23, 1564

    He was born

    Born in Stratford-upon-Avon, on 23rd as the feast of St George, England’s patron saint.
    He was christened on 26th April.
    Father John, a glover and a wool dealer.
    Mother Mary Arden, form an important family.
    It was a plague year -> will always follow him and interfere with his work.
    Attended Stratford’s grammar school: rhetoric, poetry, Latin and Greek.
  • 1582

    He married Anna Hathaway

    He was 18 when he got married.
    She, 8 years older, was already pregnant with a girl, Susanna.
    Then they had 2 twins, Judith and Hamnet.
  • Period: to

    The “lost-years”

    We have no record of Shakespeare’s whereabouts
  • Free-lance playwright

    His son die.
    Go to work to London in the theatre, as an actor and playwright.
    Experimented with 2 genres then popular:
    - light love comedy, The two gentlemen of Verona
    - Roman tragedy full of blood and atrocities, Titus Andronicus
    — and a comedy of classical origin, The Comedy of Errors, of the Latin playwright Plautus.
  • Period: to

    Plague

    A new outbreak of the plague closed down the theatres for 2 years. He quickly won himself a reputation as a poet.
    When the plague died down it was time for him to go back to the theatre
  • The Lord Chamberlain’s man (1594-1603)

    Lord Hunsdon, Queen Elizabeth’s Lord Chamberlain, assembled a new company of players: the Lord Chamberlain’s Men. He was one of them.
    - They played at the Theatre in Shoreditch.
    - He was a great asset to the company.
    - They gave him a permanent home and financial independence (became a ‘sharer’).
    - He bought “New Place”, the second-best house in Stanford. At the close of the century they moved into a new playhouse: the Globe.
  • The King’s man (1603-1616)

    James I succeeded Elizabeth when she died, he loved the theatre -> Shakespeare’s company under his protection -> King’s Men.
    He paid homage to James with a Scottish play: Macbeth.
  • Period: to

    The great tragedies

    most tragic stories, the so called “great tragedies”:
    - Othello
    - Macbeth
    - King Lear
    - Antony and Cleopatra
  • Collection of sonnets

    He finally published his collection of sonnets. THEN
    He abandoned tragic subjects and only wrote comedies, the most famous is The Tempest: in a magic island ruled by Prospero, a magician.
  • He retired

    He was able to retire to Stratford at fifty.
  • He died

    He died in Stratford on the 23rd of April, the same day on which he was born.