Sir John Gilbert's 1849 painting: The Plays of Shakespeare, containing scenes and characters from several of William Shakespeare's plays.
The plays written by English poet, playwright, and actor William Shakespeare have the reputation of being among the greatest in the English language and in Western literature. Traditionally, the plays are divided into the genres of tragedy, history, and comedy; they have been translated into every major living language, in addition to being continually performed all around the world.
Many of his plays appeared in print as a series of quartos, but approximately half of them remained unpublished until 1623, when the posthumous First Folio was published. The traditional division of his plays into tragedies, comedies, and histories follows the categories used in the First Folio. However, modern criticism has labelled some of these plays "problem plays" that elude easy categorisation, or perhaps purposely break generic conventions, and has introduced the term romances for what scholars believe to be his later comedies.
When Shakespeare first arrived in London in the late 1570s or early 1580s, dramatists writing for London's new commercial playhouses (such as The Curtain) were combining two strands of dramatic tradition into a new and distinctively Elizabethan synthesis. Previously, the most common forms of popular English theatre were the Tudor morality plays. These plays, celebrating piety generally, use personified moral attributes to urge or instruct the protagonist to choose the virtuous life over Evil. The characters and plot situations are largely symbolic rather than realistic. As a child, Shakespeare would likely have seen this type of play (along with, perhaps, mystery plays and miracle plays).[1]]
The other strand of dramatic tradition was classical aesthetic theory. This theory was derived ultimately from Aristotle; in Renaissance England, however, the theory was better known through its Roman interpreters and practitioners. At the universities, plays were staged in a more academic form as Roman closet dramas. These plays, usually performed in Latin, adhered to classical ideas of unity and decorum, but they were also more static, valuing lengthy speeches over physical action. Shakespeare would have learned this theory at grammar school, where Plautus and especially Terence were key parts of the curriculum[2] and were taught in editions with lengthy theoretical introductions.[3]
Contents
1Theatre and stage setup
2Elizabethan Shakespeare
3Jacobean Shakespeare
4Style
4.1Soliloquies in plays
5Source material of the plays
6Canonical plays
6.1Comedies
6.2Histories
6.3Tragedies
7Dramatic collaborations
8Lost plays
9Plays possibly by Shakespeare
10Shakespeare and the textual problem
11Performance history
12See also
13References
14Bibliography
15Further reading
16External links
Theatre and stage setup
Archaeological excavations on the foundations of the Rose and the Globe in the late twentieth century[4] showed that all London English Renaissance theatres were built around similar general plans. Despite individual differences, the public theatres were three stories high, and built around an open space at the centre. Usually polygonal in plan to give an overall rounded effect, three levels of inward-facing galleries overlooked the open centre into which jutted the stage—essentially a platform surrounded on three sides by the audience, only the rear being restricted for the entrances and exits of the actors and seating for the musicians. The upper level behind the stage could be used as a balcony, as in Romeo and Juliet, or as a position for a character to harangue a crowd, as in Julius Caesar.
Usually built of timber, lath and plaster and with thatched roofs, the early theatres were vulnerable to fire, and gradually were replaced (when necessary) with stronger structures. When the Globe burned down in June 1613, it was rebuilt with a tile roof.
A different model was developed with the Blackfriars Theatre, which came into regular use on a long term basis in 1599. The Blackfriars was small in comparison to the earlier theatres, and roofed rather than open to the sky; it resembled a modern theatre in ways that its predecessors did not.
Elizabethan Shakespeare
For Shakespeare as he began to write, both traditions were alive; they were, moreover, filtered through the recent success of the University Wits on the London stage. By the late 16th century, the popularity of morality and academic plays waned as the English Renaissance took hold, and playwrights like Thomas Kyd and Christopher Marlowe revolutionised theatre. Their plays blended the old morality drama with classical theory to produce a new secular form.[5] The new drama combined the rhetorical complexity of the academic play with the bawdy energy of the moralities. However, it was more ambiguous and complex in its meanings, and less concerned with simple allegory. Inspired by this new style, Shakespeare continued these artistic strategies,[6] creating plays that not only resonated on an emotional level with audiences but also explored and debated the basic elements of what it means to be human. What Marlowe and Kyd did for tragedy, John Lyly and George Peele, among others, did for comedy: they offered models of witty dialogue, romantic action, and exotic, often pastoral location that formed the basis of Shakespeare's comedic mode throughout his career.[7]
Shakespeare's Elizabethan tragedies (including the history plays with tragic designs, such as Richard II) demonstrate his relative independence from classical models. He takes from Aristotle and Horace the notion of decorum; with few exceptions, he focuses on high-born characters and national affairs as the subject of tragedy. In most other respects, though, the early tragedies are far closer to the spirit and style of moralities. They are episodic, packed with character and incident; they are loosely unified by a theme or character.[8] In this respect, they reflect clearly the influence of Marlowe, particularly of Tamburlaine. Even in his early work, however, Shakespeare generally shows more restraint than Marlowe; he resorts to grandiloquent rhetoric less frequently, and his attitude towards his heroes is more nuanced, and sometimes more sceptical, than Marlowe's.[9] By the turn of the century, the bombast of Titus Andronicus had vanished, replaced by the subtlety of Hamlet.
In comedy, Shakespeare strayed even further from classical models. The Comedy of Errors, an adaptation of Menaechmi, follows the model of new comedy closely. Shakespeare's other Elizabethan comedies are more romantic. Like Lyly, he often makes romantic intrigue (a secondary feature in Latin new comedy) the main plot element;[10] even this romantic plot is sometimes given less attention than witty dialogue, deceit, and jests. The "reform of manners," which Horace considered the main function of comedy,[11] survives in such episodes as the gulling of Malvolio.
Jacobean Shakespeare
Shakespeare reached maturity as a dramatist at the end of Elizabeth's reign, and in the first years of the reign of James. In these years, he responded to a deep shift in popular tastes, both in subject matter and approach. At the turn of the decade, he responded to the vogue for dramatic satire initiated by the boy players at Blackfriars and St. Paul's. At the end of the decade, he seems to have attempted to capitalise on the new fashion for tragicomedy,[12] even collaborating with John Fletcher, the writer who had popularised the genre in England.
The influence of younger dramatists such as John Marston and Ben Jonson is seen not only in the problem plays, which dramatise intractable human problems of greed and lust, but also in the darker tone of the Jacobean tragedies.[13] The Marlovian, heroic mode of the Elizabethan tragedies is gone, replaced by a darker vision of heroic natures caught in environments of pervasive corruption. As a sharer in both the Globe and in the King's Men, Shakespeare never wrote for the boys' companies; however, his early Jacobean work is markedly influenced by the techniques of the new, satiric dramatists. One play, Troilus and Cressida, may even have been inspired by the War of the Theatres.[14]
Shakespeare's final plays hark back to his Elizabethan comedies in their use of romantic situation and incident.[15] In these plays, however, the sombre elements that are largely glossed over in the earlier plays are brought to the fore and often rendered dramatically vivid. This change is related to the success of tragicomedies such as Philaster, although the uncertainty of dates makes the nature and direction of the influence unclear. From the evidence of the title-page to The Two Noble Kinsmen and from textual analysis it is believed by some editors that Shakespeare ended his career in collaboration with Fletcher, who succeeded him as house playwright for the King's Men.[16] These last plays resemble Fletcher's tragicomedies in their attempt to find a comedic mode capable of dramatising more serious events than had his earlier comedies.
Style
During the reign of Queen Elizabeth, "drama became the ideal means to capture and convey the diverse interests of the time."[17] Stories of various genres were enacted for audiences consisting of both the wealthy and educated and the poor and illiterate. Later on, he retired at the height of the Jacobean period, not long before the start of the Thirty Years' War. His verse style, his choice of subjects, and his stagecraft all bear the marks of both periods.[18] His style changed not only in accordance with his own tastes and developing mastery, but also in accord with the tastes of the audiences for whom he wrote.[19]
While many passages in Shakespeare's plays are written in prose, he almost always wrote a large proportion of his plays and poems in iambic pentameter. In some of his early works (like Romeo and Juliet), he even added punctuation at the end of these iambic pentameter lines to make the rhythm even stronger.[20] He and many dramatists of this period used the form of blank verse extensively in character dialogue, thus heightening poetic effects.
To end many scenes in his plays he used a rhyming couplet to give a sense of conclusion, or completion.[21]
A typical example is provided in Macbeth: as Macbeth leaves the stage to murder Duncan (to the sound of a chiming clock), he says,[22]
“
Hear it not Duncan; for it is a knell
That summons thee to heaven or to hell.
”
Shakespeare's writing (especially his plays) also feature extensive wordplay in which double entendres and rhetorical flourishes are repeatedly used.[23][24] Humour is a key element in all of Shakespeare's plays. Although a large amount of his comical talent is evident in his comedies, some of the most entertaining scenes and characters are found in tragedies such as Hamlet and histories such as Henry IV, Part 1. Shakespeare's humour was largely influenced by Plautus.[25]
Soliloquies in plays
Shakespeare's plays are also notable for their use of soliloquies, in which a character makes a speech to him- or herself so the audience can understand the character's inner motivations and conflict.[26]
In his book Shakespeare and the History of Soliloquies, James Hirsh defines the convention of a Shakespearean soliloquy in early modern drama. He argues that when a person on the stage speaks to himself or herself, they are characters in a fiction speaking in character; this is an occasion of self-address. Furthermore, Hirsh points out that Shakespearean soliloquies and "asides" are audible in the fiction of the play, bound to be overheard by any other character in the scene unless certain elements confirm that the speech is protected. Therefore, a Renaissance playgoer who was familiar with this dramatic convention would have been alert to Hamlet's expectation that his soliloquy be overheard by the other characters in the scene. Moreover, Hirsh asserts that in soliloquies in other Shakespearean plays, the speaker is entirely in character within the play's fiction. Saying that addressing the audience was outmoded by the time Shakespeare was alive, he "acknowledges few occasions when a Shakespearean speech might involve the audience in recognising the simultaneous reality of the stage and the world the stage is representing." Other than 29 speeches delivered by choruses or characters who revert to that condition as epilogues "Hirsh recognises only three instances of audience address in Shakespeare's plays, 'all in very early comedies, in which audience address is introduced specifically to ridicule the practice as antiquated and amateurish.'"[27]
Source material of the plays
The first edition of Raphael Holinshed's Chronicles of England, Scotlande, and Irelande, printed in 1577.
As was common in the period, Shakespeare based many of his plays on the work of other playwrights and recycled older stories and historical material. His dependence on earlier sources was a natural consequence of the speed at which playwrights of his era wrote; in addition, plays based on already popular stories appear to have been seen as more likely to draw large crowds. There were also aesthetic reasons: Renaissance aesthetic theory took seriously the dictum that tragic plots should be grounded in history. For example, King Lear is probably an adaptation of an older play, King Leir, and the Henriad probably derived from The Famous Victories of Henry V.[28] There is speculation that Hamlet (c.1601) may be a reworking of an older, lost play (the so-called Ur-Hamlet),[29] but the number of lost plays from this time period makes it impossible to determine that relationship with certainty. (The Ur-Hamlet may in fact have been Shakespeare's, and was just an earlier and subsequently discarded version.)[28] For plays on historical subjects, Shakespeare relied heavily on two principal texts. Most of the Roman and Greek plays are based on Plutarch's Parallel Lives (from the 1579 English translation by Sir Thomas North),[30] and the English history plays are indebted to Raphael Holinshed's 1587 Chronicles. This structure did not apply to comedy, and those of Shakespeare's plays for which no clear source has been established, such as Love's Labour's Lost and The Tempest, are comedies. Even these plays, however, rely heavily on generic commonplaces.
While there is much dispute about the exact chronology of Shakespeare plays, as well as the Shakespeare Authorship Question, the plays tend to fall into three main stylistic groupings.
The first major grouping of his plays begins with his histories and comedies of the 1590s. Shakespeare's earliest plays tended to be adaptations of other playwrights' works and employed blank verse and little variation in rhythm. However, after the plague forced Shakespeare and his company of actors to leave London for periods between 1592 and 1594, Shakespeare began to use rhymed couplets in his plays, along with more dramatic dialogue. These elements showed up in The Taming of the Shrew and A Midsummer Night's Dream. Almost all of the plays written after the plague hit London are comedies, perhaps reflecting the public's desire at the time for light-hearted fare. Other comedies from Shakespeare during this period include Much Ado About Nothing,The Merry Wives of Windsor and As You Like It.
The middle grouping of Shakespeare's plays begins in 1599 with Julius Caesar. For the next few years, Shakespeare would produce his most famous dramas, including Macbeth,Hamlet, and King Lear. The plays during this period are in many ways the darkest of Shakespeare's career and address issues such as betrayal, murder, lust, power and egoism.
The final grouping of plays, called Shakespeare's late romances, include Pericles, Prince of Tyre, Cymbeline, The Winter's Tale and The Tempest. The romances are so called because they bear similarities to medieval romance literature. Among the features of these plays are a redemptive plotline with a happy ending, and magic and other fantastic elements.
Canonical plays
Except where noted, the plays below are listed, for the thirty-six plays included in the First Folio of 1623, according to the order in which they appear there, with two plays that were not included (Pericles, Prince of Tyre and The Two Noble Kinsmen) being added at the end of the list of comedies and Edward III at the end of the list of histories.
Comedies
Main article: Shakespearean comedy
The TempestLR
Two Gentlemen of Verona
The Merry Wives of Windsor
Measure for MeasurePP
The Comedy of Errors
Much Ado About Nothing
Love's Labour's Lost
A Midsummer Night's Dream
The Merchant of VenicePP
As You Like It
The Taming of the Shrew
All's Well That Ends WellPP
Twelfth Night
The Winter's TaleLRPP
Pericles, Prince of TyreLRFF
The Two Noble KinsmenLRFF
Histories
Main article: Shakespearean history
King John
Richard II
Henry IV, Part 1
Henry IV, Part 2
Henry V
Henry VI, Part 1
Henry VI, Part 2
Henry VI, Part 3
Richard III
Henry VIII
Edward IIIFF
Tragedies
Main article: Shakespearean tragedy
Troilus and Cressida PP
Coriolanus
Titus Andronicus
Romeo and Juliet
Timon of Athens PP
Julius Caesar
Macbeth
Hamlet
King Lear
Othello
Antony and Cleopatra
Cymbeline LR
Note: Plays marked with LR are now commonly referred to as the "late romances". Plays marked with PP are sometimes referred to as the "problem plays". The three plays marked with FF were not included in the First Folio.
Dramatic collaborations
Main article: Shakespeare's collaborations
Like most playwrights of his period, Shakespeare did not always write alone, and a number of his plays were collaborative, although the exact number is open to debate. Some of the following attributions, such as for The Two Noble Kinsmen, have well-attested contemporary documentation; others, such as for Titus Andronicus, remain more controversial and are dependent on linguistic analysis by modern scholars.
Cardenio, either a lost play or one that survives only in later adaptation Double Falsehood; contemporary reports say that Shakespeare collaborated on it with John Fletcher.
Cymbeline, in which the Yale edition suggests a collaborator had a hand in the authorship, and some scenes (Act III scene 7 and Act V scene 2) may strike the reader as un-Shakespearean compared with others.
Edward III, of which Brian Vickers' recent analysis concluded that the play was 40% Shakespeare and 60% Thomas Kyd.
Henry VI, Part 1, possibly the work of a team of playwrights, whose identities we can only guess at. Some scholars argue that Shakespeare wrote less than 20% of the text.
Henry VIII, generally considered a collaboration between Shakespeare and Fletcher.
Macbeth, Thomas Middleton may have revised this tragedy in 1615 to incorporate extra musical sequences.
Measure for Measure may have undergone a light revision by Middleton at some point after its original composition.
Pericles, Prince of Tyre may include the work of George Wilkins, either as collaborator, reviser, or revisee.
Timon of Athens may result from collaboration between Shakespeare and Middleton; this might explain its unusual plot and unusually cynical tone.
Titus Andronicus may be a collaboration with, or revision by, George Peele.
The Two Noble Kinsmen, published in quarto in 1634 and attributed to Fletcher and Shakespeare; each playwright appears to have written about half of the text.
Lost plays
Love's Labour's Won – a late sixteenth-century writer, Francis Meres, and a bookseller's list both include this title among Shakespeare's recent works, but no play of this title has survived. It may have become lost, or it may represent an alternative title of one of the plays listed above, such as Much Ado About Nothing or All's Well That Ends Well.
Cardenio – attributed to William Shakespeare and John Fletcher in a Stationers' Register entry of 1653 (alongside a number of erroneous attributions), and often believed to have been re-worked from a subplot in Cervantes' Don Quixote. In 1727, Lewis Theobald produced a play he called Double Falshood, which he claimed to have adapted from three manuscripts of a lost play by Shakespeare that he did not name. Double Falshood does re-work the Cardenio story, but modern scholarship has not established with certainty whether or not Double Falshood includes fragments of Shakespeare's lost play.
Plays possibly by Shakespeare
Note: For a comprehensive account of plays possibly by Shakespeare or in part by Shakespeare, see the separate entry on the Shakespeare Apocrypha.
Arden of Faversham – the middle portion of the play (scenes 4–9) may have been written by Shakespeare.
Edmund Ironside – contains numerous words first used by Shakespeare.
Sir Thomas More – a collaborative work by several playwrights, including Shakespeare. There is a "growing scholarly consensus"[31] that Shakespeare was called in to re-write a contentious scene in the play and that "Hand D" in the surviving manuscript is that of Shakespeare himself.[32]
The Spanish Tragedy – additional passages included in the fourth quarto, including the "painter scene", are likely to have been written by him.[33]
Shakespeare and the textual problem
Unlike his contemporary Ben Jonson, Shakespeare did not have direct involvement in publishing his plays and produced no overall authoritative version of his plays before he died. As a result, the problem of identifying what Shakespeare actually wrote is a major concern for most modern editions.
One of the reasons there are textual problems is that there was no copyright of writings at the time. As a result, Shakespeare and the playing companies he worked with did not distribute scripts of his plays, for fear that the plays would be stolen. This led to bootleg copies of his plays, which were often based on people trying to remember what Shakespeare had actually written.
Textual corruptions also stemming from printers' errors, misreadings by compositors, or simply wrongly scanned lines from the source material litter the Quartos and the First Folio. Additionally, in an age before standardised spelling, Shakespeare often wrote a word several times in a different spelling, and this may have contributed to some of the transcribers' confusion. Modern editors have the task of reconstructing Shakespeare's original words and expurgating errors as far as possible.
In some cases the textual solution presents few difficulties. In the case of Macbeth for example, scholars believe that someone (probably Thomas Middleton) adapted and shortened the original to produce the extant text published in the First Folio, but that remains our only authorised text. In others the text may have become manifestly corrupt or unreliable (Pericles or Timon of Athens) but no competing version exists. The modern editor can only regularise and correct erroneous readings that have survived into the printed versions.
The textual problem can, however, become rather complicated. Modern scholarship now believes Shakespeare to have modified his plays through the years, sometimes leading to two existing versions of one play. To provide a modern text in such cases, editors must face the choice between the original first version and the later, revised, usually more theatrical version. In the past editors have resolved this problem by conflating the texts to provide what they believe to be a superior Ur-text, but critics now argue that to provide a conflated text would run contrary to Shakespeare's intentions. In King Lear for example, two independent versions, each with their own textual integrity, exist in the Quarto and the Folio versions. Shakespeare's changes here extend from the merely local to the structural. Hence the Oxford Shakespeare, published in 1986 (second edition 2005), provides two different versions of the play, each with respectable authority. The problem exists with at least four other Shakespearian plays (Henry IV, part 1, Hamlet, Troilus and Cressida, and Othello).
Performance history
Main article: Shakespeare in performance
The modern reconstruction of the Globe Theatre, in London.
During Shakespeare's lifetime, many of his greatest plays were staged at the Globe Theatre and the Blackfriars Theatre.[34][35] Shakespeare's fellow members of the Lord Chamberlain's Men acted in his plays. Among these actors were Richard Burbage (who played the title role in the first performances of many of Shakespeare's plays, including Hamlet, Othello, Richard III and King Lear),[36]Richard Cowley (who played Verges in Much Ado About Nothing), William Kempe, (who played Peter in Romeo and Juliet and, possibly, Bottom in A Midsummer Night's Dream) and Henry Condell and John Heminges, who are most famous now for collecting and editing the plays of Shakespeare's First Folio (1623).
Shakespeare's plays continued to be staged after his death until the Interregnum (1649–1660),[37] when all public stage performances were banned by the Puritan rulers. After the English Restoration, Shakespeare's plays were performed in playhouses with elaborate scenery and staged with music, dancing, thunder, lightning, wave machines, and fireworks. During this time the texts were "reformed" and "improved" for the stage, an undertaking which has seemed shockingly disrespectful to posterity.
Victorian productions of Shakespeare often sought pictorial effects in "authentic" historical costumes and sets. The staging of the reported sea fights and barge scene in Antony and Cleopatra was one spectacular example.[38] Too often, the result was a loss of pace. Towards the end of the 19th century, William Poel led a reaction against this heavy style. In a series of "Elizabethan" productions on a thrust stage, he paid fresh attention to the structure of the drama. In the early twentieth century, Harley Granville-Barker directed quarto and folio texts with few cuts,[39] while Edward Gordon Craig and others called for abstract staging. Both approaches have influenced the variety of Shakespearean production styles seen today.[40]
See also
Chronology of Shakespeare's plays
Elizabethan era
Globe Theatre
List of Shakespearean characters
Shakespeare on screen
Shakespeare's late romances
The Complete Works of William Shakespeare
Music in the plays of William Shakespeare
References
^Greenblatt 2005, p. 34.
^Baldwin, T. W. Shakspere's Small Latine and Less Greek, (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1944), 499–532).
^Doran, Madeleine, Endeavors of Art (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1954), 160–171.
^Gurr, pp. 123–31 and 142-6.
^Bevington, David, From Mankind to Marlowe (Cambridge: Harvard University Press), 1969, passim.
^Shakespeare's Marlowe by Robert A. Logan, Ashgate Publishing, 2006, page 156.
^Dillon 2006, pp. 49–54.
^Irving Ribner, The English History Play in the Age of Shakespeare (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1957: 12–27.
^Eugene Waith, The Herculean Hero in Marlowe, Chapman, Shakespeare, and Dryden (New York: Columbia University Press, 1967.
^Doran 220-25.
^Edward Rand, Horace and the Spirit of Comedy (Houston: Rice Institute Press, 1937, passim.
^Arthur Kirsch, "Cymbeline and Coterie Dramaturgy,"
^R. A. Foakes, Shakespeare: Dark Comedies to Last Plays (London: Routledge, 1968): 18–40.
^O. J. Campbell, Comicall Satyre and Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida (San Marino: Huntington Library, 1938, passim.
^David Young, The Heart's Forest: A Study of Shakespeare's Pastoral Plays (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1972), 130ff.
^"Elizabethan Period (1558–1603), from ProQuest Period Pages". ProQuest. 2005.
^Wilson, F. P. (1945). Elizabethan and Jacobean. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 26.
^Bentley, G. E. "The Profession of Dramatist in Shakespeare's Time," Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 115 (1971), 481.
^Introduction to Hamlet by William Shakespeare, Barron's Educational Series, 2002, page 11.
^Meagher, John C. (2003). Pursuing Shakespeare's Dramaturgy: Some Contexts, Resources, and Strategies in His Playmaking. Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press. p. 52.
^Macbeth Act 2, Scene 1
^Mahood, Molly Maureen (1988). Shakespeare's Wordplay. Routledge. p. 9.
^"Hamlet's Puns and Paradoxes". Shakespeare Navigators. Archived from the original on 13 June 2007. Retrieved 8 June 2007.
^"Humor in Shakespeare's Plays." Shakespeare's World and Work. Ed. John F. Andrews. 2001. Charles Scribner's Sons, New York. eNotes.com. December 2005. 14 June 2007.
^Shakespeare's Soliloquies by Wolfgang H. Clemen, translated by Charity S. Stokes, Routledge, 1987, page 11.
^Maurer, Margaret (2005). "Shakespeare and the History of Soliloquies". Shakespeare Quarterly. 56 (4): 504. doi:10.1353/shq.2006.0027.
^Welsh, Alexander. Hamlet in his Modern Guises. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2001: 3
^Plutarch's Parallel Lives. Accessed 23 October 2005.
^Woodhuysen, Henry (2010). "Shakespeare's writing, from manuscript to print". In de Grazia, Margreta; Wells, Stanley. The New Cambridge companion to Shakespeare (2 ed.). Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. p. 34. ISBN 978-0-521-88632-1.
^Woodhuysen (2010: 70)
^Schuessler, Jennifer (12 August 2013). "Further Proof of Shakespeare's Hand in 'The Spanish Tragedy'". Retrieved 15 May 2018 – via NYTimes.com.
^Editor's Preface to A Midsummer Night's Dream by William Shakespeare, Simon and Schuster, 2004, page xl
^Foakes, 6. • Nagler, A.M (1958). Shakespeare's Stage. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 7.
ISBN 0-300-02689-7. • Shapiro, 131–2.
^Ringler, William jr. "Shakespeare and His Actors: Some Remarks on King Lear" from Lear from Study to Stage: Essays in Criticism edited by James Ogden and Arthur Hawley Scouten, Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press, 1997, page 127.
^Interregnum
^Halpern (1997). Shakespeare Among the Moderns. New York: Cornell University Press, 64.
ISBN 0-8014-8418-9.
^Griffiths, Trevor R (ed.) (1996). A Midsummer Night's Dream. William Shakespeare. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; Introduction, 2, 38–39.
ISBN 0-521-57565-6. • Halpern, 64.
^Bristol, Michael, and Kathleen McLuskie (eds.). Shakespeare and Modern Theatre: The Performance of Modernity. London; New York: Routledge; Introduction, 5–6.
ISBN 0-415-21984-1.
Dillon, Janette (2006). "Elizabethan comedy". In Leggatt, Alexander. The Cambridge Companion to Shakespearean Comedy. Cambridge Companions to Literature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 47–63. doi:10.1017/CCOL0521770440.004. ISBN 9780511998577.
Greenblatt, Stephen (2005). Will in The World: How Shakespeare Became Shakespeare. London: Pimlico. ISBN 0712600981.
Further reading
Shakespeare in Print: A History and Chronology of Shakespeare Publishing, by Andrew Murphy (Cambridge University Press, 2003)
ISBN 9781139439466.
External links
Wikisource has original works written by or about: William Shakespeare
Complete text of Shakespeare's plays, listed by genre
Summaries of Shakespeare's plays List of all 27 of Shakespeare's plays with summaries, and images of the plays being performed.
Complete list of shakespeare plays with synopsis
Narrative and Dramatic Sources of all Shakespeare's works Also publication years and chronology of Shakespeare plays
Folger Digital Texts
The Shakespeare Resource Center A directory of Web resources for online Shakespearean study. Includes play synopses, a works timeline, and language resources.
Shake Sphere Summary and analysis of all the plays, including those of questionable authorship, such as Edward III, The Two Noble Kinsmen, and Cardenio.
Shakespeare at the British Library - online resource including images of original manuscripts, new articles and teaching resources.
v
t
e
William Shakespeare
Plays
Tragedies
Antony and Cleopatra
Coriolanus
Hamlet
Julius Caesar
King Lear
Macbeth
Othello
Romeo and Juliet
Timon of Athens
Titus Andronicus
Troilus and Cressida
Comedies
All's Well That Ends Well
As You Like It
The Comedy of Errors
Cymbeline
Love's Labour's Lost
Measure for Measure
The Merchant of Venice
The Merry Wives of Windsor
A Midsummer Night's Dream
Much Ado About Nothing
Pericles, Prince of Tyre*
The Taming of the Shrew
The Tempest
Twelfth Night
The Two Gentlemen of Verona
The Two Noble Kinsmen*
The Winter's Tale
Histories
King John
Edward III*
Richard II
Henry IV
1
2
Henry V
Henry VI
1*
2
3
Richard III
Henry VIII*
See also
Problem plays
Late romances
Characters
A–K
L–Z
Ghost character
Chronology
Performances
Settings
Scenes
Quarto publications
First Folio
Second Folio
Poems
Shakespeare's sonnets
comparison to Petrarch
A Lover's Complaint
The Phoenix and the Turtle
The Rape of Lucrece
Venus and Adonis
Apocrypha
Plays
Arden of Faversham
The Birth of Merlin
Cardenio*
Double Falsehood
Edmund Ironside
Fair Em
Locrine
The London Prodigal
Love's Labour's Won
The Merry Devil of Edmonton
Mucedorus
The Puritan
The Second Maiden's Tragedy
Sejanus His Fall
Sir John Oldcastle
Sir Thomas More*
The Spanish Tragedy
Thomas Lord Cromwell
Thomas of Woodstock
Vortigern and Rowena
A Yorkshire Tragedy
Poems
The Passionate Pilgrim
To the Queen
Life and works
Birthplace
Bibliography
Complete Works of William Shakespeare
Translations
Early editions
Editors
English Renaissance theatre
Globe Theatre
Handwriting
Lord Chamberlain's Men/King's Men
The Theatre
Curtain Theatre
New Place
Portraits
Religious views
Sexuality
Spelling of his name
Stratford-upon-Avon
Style
Will
Legacy
Attribution studies
Authorship question
Bardolatry
Festivals
Influence
Memorials
Screen adaptations
Titles of works taken from Shakespeare
Institutions
Folger Shakespeare Library
Shakespeare Quarterly
Royal Shakespeare Company
Royal Shakespeare Theatre
Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
Shakespeare's Globe (replica)
Family
Anne Hathaway (wife)
Susanna Hall (daughter)
Hamnet Shakespeare (son)
Judith Quiney (daughter)
Elizabeth Barnard (granddaughter)
John Shakespeare (father)
Mary Arden (mother)
Gilbert Shakespeare (brother)
Joan Shakespeare (sister)
Edmund Shakespeare (brother)
Richard Shakespeare (grandfather)
John Hall (son-in-law)
Thomas Quiney (son-in-law)
Thomas Nash (grandson-in-law)
* Shakespeare and other authors
Lost
v
t
e
Shakespeare's plays
Shakespearean tragedy
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra
Characters
Mark Antony
Octavius Caesar
Lepidus
Cleopatra
Sextus Pompey
Domitius Enobarbus
Ventidius
Canidius
Scarus
Octavia
Maecenas
Agrippa
Taurus
Dolabella
Gallus
Menas
Charmian
Sources
Parallel Lives
Stage adaptations
The False One (c.1620)
All for Love (1677)
Opera
Antony and Cleopatra (1966)
On screen
1908
1913
1959 (TV)
The Spread of the Eagle (1963; TV)
1972
1974 (TV)
1981 (TV)
Related
Cultural depictions of Cleopatra
Cultural depictions of Augustus
Salad days
Asp
Thomas North
Cleopatra (1912)
Cleopatra (1917)
Roman Tragedies (2007)
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's Coriolanus
Characters
Historical
Caius Martius Coriolanus
Menenius Agrippa
Cominius
Titus Lartius
Sicinius Velutus
Junius Brutus
Tullus Aufidius
Fictional
Volumnia
Virgilia
Sources
Roman Antiquities
Parallel Lives
Ab Urbe Condita
Policraticus
A Mervalious Combat of Contrarieties (William Averell)
Adaptations
Coriolanus (1953)
The Spread of the Eagle (1963; TV)
The Tragedy of Coriolanus (1984; TV)
Coriolanus (2011)
Related
Veturia
Thomas North
Roman Tragedies (2007)
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's Cymbeline
Characters
Cymbeline
Queen
Imogen
Posthumus Leonatus
Cloten
Belarius
Guiderius
Arvirargus
Jupiter
Sources
Historia Regum Britanniae (c. 1136)
The Decameron (c. 1353)
Holinshed's Chronicles (1577)
Adaptations
Cymbeline (1982; TV)
Cymbeline (2014)
Related
Shakespeare's late romances
Philaster (c.1609)
Deus ex machina
Milford Haven
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's Hamlet
Characters
Hamlet
Claudius
Gertrude
Ghost
Polonius
Laertes
Ophelia
Horatio
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern
Fortinbras
The Gravediggers
Yorick
Soliloquies
"To be, or not to be"
"Mortal coil"
"What a piece of work is a man"
"Speak the speech"
Words and phrases
"The lady doth protest too much, methinks"
"Thy name is"
Terminology
Dumbshow
Induction
Quiddity
Substitution
Sources
Criticism
Legend of Hamlet
The Spanish Tragedy
Ur-Hamlet
Critical approaches
Bibliographies
Horwendill
Saxo Grammaticus
House of Gonzaga
Damon and Pythias
Influence
Common phrases from Hamlet
Hamlet in popular culture
References to Ophelia
Language of flowers
Human skull symbolism
Performances
Moscow Art Theatre (1911–1912)
Richard Burton (1964)
On screen
1900
1907
1908
1912
1913
1917
1921
1935
1948
1954
1961
1964
1969
1974
1990
1996
2000
2011
Adaptations
Films
The Rest Is Silence (1959)
The Bad Sleep Well (1960)
Ophelia (1963)
Johnny Hamlet (1968)
One Hamlet Less (1973)
The Angel of Vengeance – The Female Hamlet (1977)
Strange Brew (1983)
Hamlet Goes Business (1987)
The Lion King (1994)
Let the Devil Wear Black (1999)
The Banquet (2006)
Tardid (2009)
Karmayogi (2012)
Haider (2014)
Hamlet A.D.D. (2014)
Ophelia (2018)
The Lion King (2019)
Novels
Hamlet Had an Uncle (1940)
Too, Too Solid Flesh (1989)
Gertrude and Claudius (2000)
Dating Hamlet (2002)
Ophelia's Revenge (2003)
The Dead Fathers Club (2006)
Something Rotten (2007)
Hamlet's Father (2008)
The Story of Edgar Sawtelle (2008)
Plays
Hamletmachine (1977)
Dogg's Hamlet (1979)
Fortinbras (1991)
Musicals
Rockabye Hamlet (1973)
The Lion King (1997)
Television
Hamlet (Australian TV, 1959)
Hamlet at Elsinore (BBC, 1964)
Hamlet, Prince of Denmark (BBC, 1980)
Hamlet (BBC 2, animated, 1992)
Hamlet (BBC 2, 2009)
Parodies
15-Minute Hamlet
The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged)
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern
Io, Amleto
The Klingon Hamlet
"Lyle the Kindly Viking"
To Be or Not to Be: That is the Adventure
"Tales from the Public Domain"
The Skinhead Hamlet
Songs
"My Robin is to the Greenwood Gone" (16th century)
"Pull Me Under" (1992)
"Song for Athene" (1997)
Opera/classical
Hamlet (Thomas)
Amleto (Faccio)
Hamlet (Tchaikovsky)
Tristia (Berlioz)
Die Hamletmaschine (Rihm)
Hamlet (Dean)
Story within a story
Films
To Be or Not to Be (1942)
Acting Hamlet in the Village of Mrdusa Donja (1973)
To Be or Not to Be (1983)
Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead (1990)
Highlander II: The Quickening (1991)
Last Action Hero (1993)
Renaissance Man (1994)
In the Bleak Midwinter (1995)
War (2002)
Hamlet 2 (2008)
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Undead (2009)
Three Days (2012)
Plays
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead (1966)
Stage Blood (1974)
I Hate Hamlet (1991)
To Be or Not to Be (2008)
Novels
Hamlet, Revenge! (1937)
Theatre of War (1994)
"The Undiscovered" (1997)
The Shakespeare Stealer (1998)
Interred with Their Bones (2007)
Television
"The Producer" (1966)
"The Conscience of the King" (1966)
"Born to Be King" (1983)
"Terrance and Phillip: Behind the Blow" (2001)
Slings & Arrows (2003)
Art
Ophelia
Affe mit Schädel
Video game
Last Action Hero (1993)
Hamlet (2010)
Intertextuality
Asterix and the Great Crossing
The Seagull
Sharpe's Havoc
Related
Hamlet and Oedipus
Hamlet and His Problems
Hebenon
Hamlet Q1
Ostalo je ćutanje
The Chronicles of Amber
"Symphony No. 65" (Haydn)
The Hobart Shakespeareans
Gertrude – The Cry
Poor Murderer
Something Rotten!
Sons of Anarchy
v
t
e
Julius Caesar
Major life events
Early life and career of Julius Caesar
First Triumvirate
Crossing the Rubicon
Gallic Wars
Caesar's invasions of Britain
Caesar's Civil War
Constitutional reforms of Julius Caesar
Assassination of Julius Caesar
Battles
Battle of Alesia
Siege of Alexandria (47 BC)
Battle of the Arar
Siege of the Atuatuci
Battle of Bibracte
Battle of Gergovia
Battle of Ilerda
Siege of Massilia
Battle of Munda
Battle of Octodurus
Battle of Pharsalus
Battle of Ruspina
Battle of Thapsus
Battle of the Axona
Battle of the Nile (47 BC)
Battle of the Sabis
Battle of Vosges (58 BC)
Battle of Zela
Battles of Caesar's Civil War
Battle of the Bagradas (49 BC)
Battle of Dyrrhachium (48 BC)
Battle of Munda
Battle of Pharsalus
Battle of Ruspina
Battle of Thapsus
Battle of Ilerda
Battle of Lauro
Siege of Massilia
Battle of Utica (49 BC)
Family
Augustus
Cleopatra
Caesarion
Works
Anticato
Commentarii de Bello Civili
Commentarii de Bello Gallico
De analogia
Poems by Julius Caesar
Quotes
Alea iacta est
Veni, vidi, vici
Legacy
Cultural depictions of Julius Caesar
Caesar's Comet
The Death of Julius Caesar
Ides of March
Battle of Philippi
Portal
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's King Lear
Characters
King Lear
Cordelia
Goneril
Regan
Edmund
Sources
Historia Regum Britanniae (1136)
The Mirror for Magistrates (1555)
Holinshed's Chronicles (1577)
King Leir (1594)
"Water and Salt"
Related
Llŷr
Leir of Britain
Cordelia of Britain
Adaptations
Plays
The History of King Lear (1681)
The Yiddish King Lear (1892)
Safed Khoon (1907)
Lear (1971)
Novels
La Terre (1887)
A Thousand Acres (1991)
Fool (2009)
Operas
Re Lear (Libretto only) (1896)
Lear (1978)
Vision of Lear (1998)
Kuningas Lear (2000)
Films
King Lear (1910)
King Lear (1916)
Gunasundari Katha (1949)
King Lear (1971 USSR)
King Lear (1971 UK)
Ran (1985)
King Lear (1987)
A Thousand Acres (1997)
Gypsy Lore (1997)
King Lear (1999)
My Kingdom (2001)
Second Generation (2003)
Television
King Lear (1953)
BBC Television Shakespeare (1982)
King Lear (1983)
King of Texas (2002)
King Lear (2008)
King Lear (2018)
Story within a story
The Dresser (1980 play)
The Dresser (1983 film)
The Dresser (2015 film)
Other
Tiriel (1789, poem)
The Prince of the Pagodas (1957, ballet)
The Tragedy of King Lear (screenplay)
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's Macbeth
Characters
Macbeth
Lady Macbeth
Banquo
Macduff
King Duncan
Malcolm
Donalbain
Three Witches
Fleance
Lady Macduff
Macduff's son
Third Murderer
Young Siward
Inspirations
Macbeth, King of Scotland
Gruoch of Scotland
Duncan I of Scotland
Malcolm III of Scotland
Donald III of Scotland
Siward, Earl of Northumbria
King James VI and I
Sources
Daemonologie (1597)
The Witch (play)
Holinshed's Chronicles
Darraðarljóð
Film
1908
1909 (French)
1909 (Italian)
1911
1913
1915
1916
1922
1948
1971
2006
2015
Cancelled (Olivier)
Television
1954
1960 US TV
1960 Australian TV
1961
1979
1982
1983
1992
2005
2010
TV / film adaptations
The Real Thing at Last (1916)
Marmayogi (1951)
Joe MacBeth (1955)
Throne of Blood (1957)
Macbeth (Verdi opera) (1987)
Men of Respect (1990)
Scotland, PA (2001)
Makibefo (2001)
Maqbool (2003)
Shakespeare Must Die (2012)
Veeram (2016)
Plays
Voodoo Macbeth (1936)
MacBird! (1967)
uMabatha (1970)
Macbett (1972)
Cahoot's Macbeth (1979)
MacHomer (1995)
Sleep No More (2009)
Dunsinane (2010)
Sleep No More (2011)
Just Macbeth!
Operas
Macbeth (1847, Verdi)
discography
Macbeth (1910, Bloch)
Literary adaptations
Wyrd Sisters (1988)
The Last King of Scotland (1998)
Albums
Music from Macbeth (1972)
Macbeth (1990)
Thane to the Throne (2000)
Shakespeare's Macbeth – A Tragedy in Steel (2003)
Lady Macbeth (2005)
Art
Pity (1795)
The Night of Enitharmon's Joy (1795)
Ellen Terry as Lady Macbeth (1889)
Lady Macbeth (1905 sculpture)
Scenes and speeches
"On the Knocking at the Gate in Macbeth" (1823)
Sleepwalking Scene (5.1)
"Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow"
Words and phrases
"What's done is done"
"Crack of doom"
"Strange but true"
The Scottish Play
Thane of Cawdor
Story within a story
We Work Again
Light Thickens
The Deadly Affair
"The Movies"
"Sleeping with the Enemy"
"The Shower Principle"
Mécanisme de la physionomie humaine
The Scottish Play
Burke & Hare
Episodes
"A Witch's Tangled Hare" (1959, Looney Tunes)
"The Bellero Shield" (1964, The Outer Limits)
"Sense and Senility" (1987, Blackadder the Third)
"The Coup" (2006, The Office)
"Dial "N" for Nerder" (2008, The Simpsons)
"Four Great Women and a Manicure" (2009, The Simpsons)
"The Understudy" (2014, Inside No. 9)
Other
Macbeth (Strauss)
The Scottish Play
Piano Trios, Op. 70 (Beethoven)
The Ruins of Cawdor
House of Cards (UK, 1990)
House of Cards (US, 2013–present)
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's Othello
Characters
Othello
Desdemona
Iago
Cassio
Emilia
Bianca
Roderigo
Brabantio
Other characters
Source
Della descrittione dell’Africa (1550) by Leo Africanus
"Un Capitano Moro" from Gli Hecatommithi (1565) by Cintio
Opera and ballet adaptations
Otello (1816; opera)
Otello (1887; opera)
Othello (1892; overture)
The Moor's Pavane (1949; ballet)
Othello (1998; ballet score)
Bandanna (1999; opera)
Films
1922
1951
1956
1965
1995
TV
1965
1981
1990
1994
2001
Stage adaptations
The Duke of Milan (1623)
Love's Sacrifice (1633)
Masquerade (1835)
Othello (1951)
Catch My Soul (US; 1969)
Catch My Soul (UK; 1970)
Desdemona (2011)
Film adaptations
Jubal (1956)
All Night Long (1962)
Catch My Soul (1974)
Kaliyattam (1997)
O (2001)
Souli (2004)
Omkara (2006)
Jarum Halus (2008)
From Verdi
Otello (1906; film)
Othello Ballet Suite/Electronic Organ Sonata No. 1 (1967; ballet suite)
Otello (1986; film)
The Othello Syndrome (2008; album)
Art
Othello
Phrases
"Beast with two backs"
Related
Othello error
Filming Othello
Story within a story
Carnival (1921 film)
Carnival (1931 film)
The Deceiver (1931)
Men Are Not Gods (1936)
A Double Life (1947)
Saptapadi (1961)
The Dresser (1980 play)
The Dresser (1983 film)
Goodnight Desdemona (1988)
An Imaginary Tale (1990)
Red Velvet (2012 play)
The Dresser (2015 film)
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet
Characters
Romeo
Juliet
Mercutio
Tybalt
Benvolio
Friar Laurence
Nurse
Paris
Rosaline
Queen Mab
Atomy
Sources
The Tragical History of Romeus and Juliet
Pyramus and Thisbe
Palace of Pleasure
Troilus and Criseyde
Ballets
Romeo and Juliet (1938, Prokofiev)
Romeo and Juliet (1962, Cranko)
Romeo and Juliet (1965, MacMillan)
Romeo and Juliet (1977, Nureyev)
Romeo and Juliet (1965, Lavery)
Radio and Juliet (2005)
Romeo + Juliet (2007, Martins)
Romeo and Juliet (2008, Pastor)
Operas
Romeo und Julie (1776, Benda)
Giulietta e Romeo (1796, Zingarelli)
Giulietta e Romeo (1825, Vaccai)
I Capuleti e i Montecchi (1830, Bellini)
Gloria (1874, Cilea)
Roméo et Juliette (1867, Gounod)
A Village Romeo and Juliet (1907, Delius)
Romeo und Julia (1940, Sutermeister)
Romeo und Julia (1943, Blacher)
Musicals
The Belle of Mayfair (1906)
West Side Story (1957)
Once on This Island (1990)
Roméo et Juliette, de la Haine à l'Amour (2001)
Giulietta e Romeo (2007)
Classical
Beethoven's String Quartet No. 1 (c. 1800)
Roméo et Juliette (1839, Berlioz)
Romeo and Juliet (1870, Tchaikovsky)
On screen
1900
1908
1916 Metro Pictures
1916 Fox
1936
1940
1953
1954
1955
1964
1968
1978 (TV)
1992 (TV)
1996
2006
2013
Film adaptations
English
Beneath the 12-Mile Reef (1953)
Romanoff and Juliet (1961)
West Side Story (1961)
Gonks Go Beat (1965)
Lonesome Cowboys (1968)
Romie-0 and Julie-8 (TV; 1979)
The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet (1982)
Valley Girl (1983)
Bullies (1986)
China Girl (1987)
Romeo.Juliet (1990)
Tromeo and Juliet (1996)
Love Is All There Is (1996)
Rose by Any Other Name... (1997)
The Lion King II: Simba's Pride (1998)
Shakespeare in Love (1998)
The Magical Legend of the Leprechauns (1999)
Romeo Must Die (2000)
Brooklyn Babylon (2001)
Pizza My Heart (TV; 2005)
West Bank Story (2005)
Life and Lyrics (2006)
Romeo & Juliet: Sealed with a Kiss (2006)
Rome & Jewel (2006)
David & Fatima (2008)
The Cross Road (2008)
Vicious Circle (2008)
Gnomeo & Juliet (2011)
Private Romeo (2011)
Warm Bodies (2013)
Make Your Move (2013)
Romeo & Juliet (2013)
Hindi
Ek Duuje Ke Liye (1981)
Qayamat Se Qayamat Tak (1988)
Saudagar (1991)
Kuch Tum Kaho Kuch Hum Kahein (2002)
Bollywood Queen (2002)
Ishaqzaade (2012)
Goliyon Ki Raasleela Ram-Leela (2013)
Issaq (2013)
Telugu
Maro Charitra (1978)
Akkada Ammayi Ikkada Abbayi (1996)
Kalisundam Raa (2000)
Maro Charitra (2010)
Spanish
Romeo and Juliet (1940)
Los Tarantos (1963)
30:e november (Swedish/Spanish 1995)
Amar te duele (2002)
Italian
Fury of Johnny Kid (1967)
Ma che musica maestro (1971)
Portuguese
Mônica e Cebolinha: No Mundo de Romeu e Julieta (1979)
O Casamento de Romeu e Julieta (2005)
Other
Ambikapathy (Tamil 1937)
Les amants de Vérone (French 1949)
Ambikapathy (Tamil 1957)
Romeo, Juliet and Darkness (Czech 1960)
The Phantom Lover (Mandarin 1995)
Chicken Rice War (Cantonese/English 2000)
Ondagona Baa (Kannada 2003)
Mamay (Ukrainian 2003)
The District! (Hungarian 2004)
In Fair Palestine: A Story of Romeo and Juliet (2006)
The Bubble (Hebrew/Arabic 2006)
Priyatama (Marathi 2014)
Arshinagar (Bengali 2015)
Eeda (Malayalam 2017)
The Sea Prince and the Fire Child (Japanese 1981)
TV series
Sons and Daughters (1982)
Family and Friends (1990)
Villa Quintana (1995)
Yo amo a Paquita Gallego (1998)
Skin (2003)
A Touch Away (2006)
Dangerous (2007)
Romeo × Juliet (2007)
Romeo y Julieta (2007)
Saints & Sinners (2007)
Harina de otro costal (2010)
Villa Quintana (2013)
Westside (2013 pilot)
Star-Crossed (2014)
Still Star-Crossed (2017)
Plays
Romanoff and Juliet (1956)
Romeo and Juliet (2013)
Songs
Lan và Điệp (1930s)
"Montagues and Capulets" (1935)
"Fever" (1956)
Love Theme from Romeo and Juliet (1968)
"(Don't Fear) The Reaper" (1976)
"Angelo" (1978)
"Romeo and Juliet" (1978)
"Romeo and Juliet" (1981)
"Cherish" (1989)
"Amor Prohibido" (1994)
"Kissing You" (1996)
"Exit Music" (1997)
"Starcrossed" (2004)
"Peut-être toi" (2006)
"Mademoiselle Juliette" (2007)
"Love Story" (2008)
"Love Me Again"
"Laal Ishq"
"Mor Bani Thanghat Kare"
"Nagada Sang Dhol"
"Ram Chahe Leela" (2013)
Albums
Romeo and Juliet (1968)
Romeo + Juliet (1996)
Romeo & Julia (2006)
Tragic Lovers (2008)
Literature
Les Chouans
The Wandering Jew (1844)
The Stolen Dormouse (1941)
The Faraway Lurs (1963)
Romiette and Julio (2001)
New Moon (2006)
Warm Bodies (2010)
Art
Romeo and Juliet: the Tomb Scene (1790)
Romeo and Juliet (1978)
Phrases
"Star-crossed"
"A rose by any other name would smell as sweet"
Story within a story
Nicholas Nickleby
1912 film
1947 film
1980 play
2001 film
2002 film
The Picture of Dorian Gray
1910 film
1913 film
1915 film
1916 film
1917 film
1918 film
1945 film
1976 TV special
2009 film
Harlequinade
W Juliet
"Nothing Broken but My Heart"
Panic Button
Bare: A Pop Opera
Bolji život
The Sky Is Everywhere
Pay as You Exit
The White Mercedes
She Died a Lady
"Moonshine River"
Rendez-vous
Fame
"I Am Unicorn"
The Frog Prince
Molly
Smart Girls Get What They Want
Tumbleweeds
"The Thief of Baghead"
The Songs of a Sentimental Bloke
Prince Charming
Km. 0
Phileine Says Sorry
Hamateur Night
"Say You'll Be Mine"
Into the Gauntlet
Wandering Son
K-On!
Foreign stories
Adam Khan and Durkhanai
Tum Teav
Yusuf Khan and Sherbano
Solomon & Gaenor
Butterfly Lovers
Hani and Sheh Mureed
Lục Vân Tiên
film
Teav Aek
Layla and Majnun
Lovers of Teruel
film
Lord Saltoun and Auchanachie
Ishaqzaade
Other
Such Tweet Sorrow
Romeo and Juliet effect
After Juliet
"Upper West Side Story" (2012)
Millennium Dome Show
Inge Sylten and Heinz Drosihn
Boys Don't Cry
My Wedding and Other Secrets
Donkey in Lahore
Upside Down
Letters to Juliet
Sherlock Gnomes
Book:Romeo and Juliet
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's Timon of Athens
Characters
Timon
Alcibiades
Apemantus
Sources
Palace of Pleasure (1566)
Adaptations
Timon (1973)
Timon of Athens (1981)
Revisions
The History of Timon of Athens the Man-hater (1677)
Related
Thomas Middleton
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus
Characters
Titus Andronicus
Tamora
Aaron
Lavinia
Emperor Saturninus
Marcus
Lucius
Sources
Ab Urbe Condita (c.26 BC)
Metamorphoses (c.AD 8)
Thyestes (first century AD)
Gesta Romanorum (late third century AD)
Adaptations
Titus Andronicus (1985; TV)
Titus (1999)
"Scott Tenorman Must Die" (2001; TV)
The Hungry (2017)
Related
Peacham drawing
Authorship question
Themes
"Titus Andronicus' Complaint"
George Peele
Philomela
Thyestes
Revenge play
Grand Guignol
Gorboduc (1561)
Edmund Ironside (1590)
Jan Vos
Titus (soundtrack)
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida
Characters
Trojans
Priam
Hector
Deiphobus
Helenus
Paris
Troilus
Cassandra
Andromache
Aeneas
Pandarus
Cressida
Calchas
Helen
Greeks
Agamemnon
Menelaus
Nestor
Ulysses
Achilles
Patroclus
Diomedes
Ajax
Thersites
Myrmidons
Sources
Troilus and Criseyde
Troy Book
Recuyell of the Historyes of Troye
Adaptations
The Face of Love (1954, TV)
Troilus and Cressida (1981, TV)
Related
Trojan War
Trojan War in popular culture
Achilles and Patroclus
Shakespearean problem play
"Bitch"
Shakespearean comedy
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's All's Well That Ends Well
Characters
Bertram
Countess of Roussillon
Helen
Rinaldo
Lavatch
Paroles
King of France
Lafeu
Duke of Florence
Widow
Diana
Mariana
Sources
The Decameron (c.1353)
Palace of Pleasure (1566)
Adaptations
All's Well That Ends Well (1981; TV)
Related
Shakespearean problem play
Diana
Alazôn
Bed trick
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's As You Like It
Characters
Rosalind
Orlando
Celia
Jaques
Touchstone
Screen
1912
1936
Sollu Thambi Sollu (1959)
1978 (TV)
1994 (TV)
2006
Related
"All the world's a stage"
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's The Comedy of Errors
Characters
Antipholus of Syracuse
Antipholus of Ephesus
Dromio of Syracuse
Dromio of Ephesus
Adriana
Luciana
Egeon
Emilia
Solinus
Sources
Menaechmi
Amphitryon
Apollonius of Tyre
Opera and musicals
Gli equivoci (1786)
The Boys from Syracuse (1938)
Pozdvižení v Efesu (1943)
The Comedy of Errors (1976)
The Bomb-itty of Errors (2000)
Film/TV
The Boys from Syracuse (1940)
Bhranti Bilas (1963)
Do Dooni Char (1968)
Angoor (1982)
The Comedy of Errors (1983; TV)
Big Business (1988)
Ulta Palta (1997)
Bade Miyan Chote Miyan (1998)
Dam Dama Dam (1998)
Ulta Palta (1998)
Heeralal Pannalal (1999)
Double Di Trouble (2014)
Related
Classical unities
Gesta Grayorum (1688)
The Flying Karamazov Brothers
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's Love's Labour's Lost
Characters
King Ferdinand of Navarre
Lord Berowne
Lord Longaville
Lord Dumaine
Princess of France
Lady Rosaline
Lady Maria
Lady Katharine
Boyet
Don Adriano de Armado
Moth
Sir Nathaniel
Holofernes
Dull
Costard
Jaquenetta
Marcadé
Adaptations
Love's Labor Lost (animated; 1920)
Love's Labour's Lost (opera; 1973)
Love's Labour's Lost (TV; 1985)
Love's Labour's Lost (film; 2000)
Related
Love's Labour's Won
Honorificabilitudinitatibus
Nine Worthies
The School of Night
Robert Tofte
The Princess (poem; 1847)
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's Measure for Measure
Characters
Angelo
Sources
Hecatommithi by Cinthio
Promos and Cassandra by George Whetstone
Theatrical Adaptations
The Law Against Lovers (1662)
Das Liebesverbot (1834)
Round Heads and Pointed Heads (1936)
Desperate Measures (2004)
Film Adaptations
Measure for Measure (1943)
Measure for Measure (1979; TV)
Related
Thomas Middleton
Mariana (Tennyson)
Bletting
Bed trick
Shakespearean problem play
Mariana (Millais)
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice
Characters
Shylock
Antonio
Portia
Jessica
Sources
Gesta Romanorum
Il Pecorone
The Jew of Malta
On screen
1914
1916
1923
Shylock (1940)
1961
1969
1980 (TV)
2004
Adaptations
Le marchand de Venise (1935, opera)
Shylock (1987, musical)
The Merchant of Venice (1982, opera)
Derivative works
Serenade to Music (1938)
Shylock (1996)
Yasser (2001)
The Maori Merchant of Venice (2002)
Related
"All that glitters is not gold"
"Between you and I"
"The quality of mercy"
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's The Merry Wives of Windsor
Characters
Falstaff
Mistress Quickly
Ancient Pistol
Bardolph
Robert Shallow
Corporal Nym
Film/Television
The Merry Wives of Windsor (1950)
Overture to The Merry Wives of Windsor (1953)
The Merry Wives of Windsor (1982; TV)
Opera/Musical
Falstaff (1799)
The Merry Wives of Windsor (1849)
Falstaff (1893)
Sir John in Love (1929)
Lone Star Love (2004)
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream
Characters
Lovers
Theseus and Hippolyta
Oberon and Titania
Hermia and Lysander
Helena and Demetrius
Mechanicals
Nick Bottom
Peter Quince
Francis Flute
Robin Starveling
Tom Snout
Snug
Other characters
Puck
Egeus
Philostrate
Film
1909
1935
1959
1968
1999
Television
1969
1980
1992
1994
2016
Stage
A Midsummer Night's Dream (1970, play)
The Park (1983, play)
The Donkey Show (1999, musical)
The Dreaming (2001, musical)
Ballet
A Midsummer Night's Dream (1962)
The Dream (1964)
Opera
The Fairy-Queen (1692)
Pyramus and Thisbe (1745)
Puck (1949)
A Midsummer Night's Dream (1960, opera)
The Enchanted Island (2011)
Film adaptations
Wood Love (1925)
Dream of a Summer Night (1983)
Get Over It (2001)
A Midsummer Night's Rave (2002)
Midsummer Dream (2005)
Were the World Mine (2008)
Strange Magic (2015)
Other adaptations
The Triumph of Beauty (1646)
St. John's Eve (1852)
"Fascination" (1994)
Literature
A Midsummer Tempest (1974)
A Midsummer Night's Gene (1997)
A Midsummer's Nightmare (1997)
Lords and Ladies (1992)
The Great Night (2011)
Comics
Auberon
Faerie
Titania
Music
A Midsummer Night's Dream (1842, Mendelssohn)
Wedding March (1842, Mendelssohn)
Three Shakespeare Songs (1951)
Symphony No. 8 (1992, Henze)
Il Sogno (2004)
Art
Hermia and Lysander
The Quarrel of Oberon and Titania
Scene from A Midsummer Night's Dream
Related
The Sandman: Dream Country (1991)
Pyramus and Thisbe
Mechanical
Love-in-idleness
The Apartment (1996)
Wicker Park (2004)
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing
Characters
Don Pedro
Dogberry
Adaptations
Screen
1984 (TV)
1993
2005 (TV)
2012
Opera
Béatrice et Bénédict (1862)
Much Ado About Nothing (opera) (1901)
Musical
Much Ado (1995)
The Boys Are Coming Home (2005)
Adaptations
The Law Against Lovers (1662)
Dil Chahta Hai (2001)
Related
Dogberryism
"Curiosity killed the cat"
Pleaching
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's Pericles, Prince of Tyre
Characters
John Gower
Diana
Sources
Confessio Amantis (1390)
The Pattern of Painful Adventures (1576)
Adaptations
Pericles, Prince of Tyre (1984; TV)
Related
George Wilkins
Shakespeare's late romances
Shakespeare Apocrypha
Apollonius of Tyre
The Pattern of Painful Adventures (2008; radio)
First water
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew
Characters
Katherina Minola
Petruchio
Bianca Minola
Baptista Minola
Christopher Sly
Stage adaptations
The Woman's Prize (c1611)
Catharine and Petruchio (1754)
Las bravías (1896)
Der Widerspänstigen Zähmung (1872)
Sly, ovvero La leggenda del dormiente risvegliato (1927)
Kiss Me, Kate (1948)
The Taming of the Shrew (1953)
Ukroshchenye Stroptivoy (1957)
Christopher Sly (1963)
Direct adaptations
1908
1929
1962 (TV)
1967
1980 (TV)
1994 (TV)
Other adaptations
Daring Youth (1924)
You Made Me Love You (1933)
Second Best Bed (1938)
Kiss Me Kate (1953)
Abba Aa Hudugi (1959)
Gundamma Katha (1962)
Manithan Maravillai (1962)
McLintock! (1963)
Arivaali (1963)
Kiss Me Kate (1968)
Pattikada Pattanama (1972)
Il Bisbetico Domato (1980)
Nanjundi Kalyana (1989)
Banarasi Babu (1997)
10 Things I Hate About You (1999)
O Cravo e a Rosa (2000; TV)
Deliver Us from Eva (2003)
The Taming of the Shrew (2005; TV)
Frivolous Wife (2008)
10 Things I Hate About You (2009; TV)
Isi Life Mein (2010)
Related
The Taming of the Shrew in performance
The Taming of the Shrew on screen
Shrew (stock character)
Induction
Love-in-idleness
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's The Tempest
Characters
Prospero
Miranda
Ariel
Caliban
Sycorax
Ferdinand
Gonzalo
Stephano
Sources
A True Reportory of the Wracke and Redemption of Sir Thomas Gates, Knight
Decades of the New World
Montaigne's Essays
Ovid's Metamorphoses
Erasmus's Naufragium
Commedia dell'arte
Sea Venture
Films
1911
1960
1963
1979
1980
1992
2010
Adaptations
Music
Three Shakespeare Songs (Vaughan Williams)
The Tempest (Sullivan)
The Tempest (Sibelius)
The Tempest (Tchaikovsky)
The Tempest (ballet) (Nordheim)
"Don't Pay the Ferryman" (1982)
Screen
Yellow Sky (1948)
Forbidden Planet (1956)
Tempest (1982)
The Journey to Melonia (1989)
Prospero's Books (1991)
Painting
Scene from Shakespeare's The Tempest (Hogarth)
Ferdinand Lured by Ariel (Millais)
Musicals
Beach Blanket Tempest
Return to the Forbidden Planet
Amaluna
Plays
The Tempest (Dryden)
The Sea Voyage
The Mock Tempest (1674 Duffet)
Une Tempête (1969 Césaire)
The Sea (play) (1973)
I'll Be The Devil (2008)
Aandhibehari (2018)
Opera
The Tempest (1756 Smith)
Die Geisterinsel (libretto 1796)
Die Geisterinsel (1798 Reichardt)
Die Geisterinsel (1805 Zumsteeg)
Der Sturm (1955 Martin)
Noises, Sounds & Sweet Airs (1991 Nyman)
The Tempest (Adès 2004)
The Enchanted Island (2011 Sams)
Poetry and prose fiction
"Caliban upon Setebos" (Browning)
"The Sea and the Mirror" (Auden)
Indigo (Warner)
A Midsummer Tempest (Anderson)
Island (Rogers)
Hag-Seed (Atwood)
Phrases
"Ariel's Song"
"Full fathom five"
"What's past is prologue"
Sculpture
The Tempest (1966)
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's Twelfth Night
Characters
Viola
Orsino
Olivia
Sebastian
Malvolio
Maria
Sir Toby Belch
Sir Andrew Aguecheek
Feste
On screen
1933
1955
1966
1970 (TV)
1980 (TV)
1986
1988 (TV)
1992 (TV)
1996
Musical
Your Own Thing (1968)
Music Is (1976)
Play On! (1997)
Illyria (2004)
All Shook Up (2004)
Adaptations
Kanniyin Kaadhali (1949)
Just One of the Guys (1985)
Motocrossed (2001)
She's the Man (2006)
Dil Bole Hadippa! (2009)
Opera
Viola (unfinished)
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's The Two Gentlemen of Verona
Characters
Valentine
Proteus
Julia
Silvia
Launce
Speed
Crab
Sources
The Boke Named the Governour (1531)
Los Siete Libros de la Diana (1559)
Euphues, The Anatomy of Wit (1578)
The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia (1580)
Theatrical adaptations
Two Gentlemen of Verona (1971)
Screen adaptations
A Spray of Plum Blossoms (1931)
The Two Gentlemen of Verona (TV; 1983)
Related
Proteus
Jorge de Montemor
Stuart Draper
"An Sylvia" (1826)
Shakespeare in Love (1998)
The Goat, or Who Is Sylvia? (2002)
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's The Two Noble Kinsmen
Characters
Theseus
Hippolyta
Emilia
Pirithous
Palamon
Arcite
Hymen
Lafeu
Artesius
Valerius
Jailer
Doctor
Gerald
Nell
Timothy
Sources
"The Knight's Tale"
The Canterbury Tales
Related
Shakespeare Apocrypha
Shakespeare's late romances
John Fletcher
Creon
William Davenant
Stoolball
The Masque of the Inner Temple and Gray's Inn (1613)
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale
Characters
Leontes
Perdita
Florizel
Sources
The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia (c.1580)
Pandosto (1588)
Oberon, the Faery Prince (1611)
Adaptations
The Winter's Tale (1910)
The Winter's Tale (1967)
The Winter's Tale (1981)
"The Winter's Tale" (1994)
Operas
The Winter's Tale (2017)
Shakespearean history
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's King John
Characters
King John
Queen Eleanor
Prince Henry
Blanche of Castile
Earl of Essex
Earl of Salisbury
Earl of Pembroke
Lord Bigot
Philip Faulconbridge
King Philip of France
Louis the Dauphin
Lady Constance
Arthur
Cardinal Pandulf
Hubert
Sources
Holinshed's Chronicles (1577)
The Troublesome Reign of King John (c.1589)
Adaptations
King John (1899)
The Life and Death of King John (1984; TV)
Related
King Johan
Cultural depictions of John of England
Anglo-French War (1213–14)
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's Edward III
Characters
English
Edward III
Queen Philippa
Edward, the Black Prince
Earl of Salisbury
Countess of Salisbury
Earl of Warwick
Sir William Montague
Earl of Derby
Lord Audley
Lord Percy
Robert of Artois
Lord Montfort
French
King John II of France
Prince Charles
Prince Philip
Duke of Lorraine
King of Bohemia
Scottish
King David of Scotland
Sir William Douglas
Sources
Froissart's Chronicles (c.1370)
Palace of Pleasure (1566)
Holinshed's Chronicles (1577)
Related
Shakespeare Apocrypha
Thomas Kyd
George Peele
Robert Greene
Hundred Years' War
Battle of Halidon Hill
Siege of Calais
Battle of Crécy
Battle of Poitiers
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's Henriad
Richard II
Henry IV, Part 1
Henry IV, Part 2
Henry V
Characters and events
Richard II
Richard II
Henry Bolingbroke
Duke of York
Earl of Northumberland
Duke of Aumerle
John of Gaunt
Queen (unnamed composite of Anne of Bohemia and Isabella of Valois)
Henry 'Hotspur' Percy
Duchess of York (unnamed composite of Infanta Isabella of Castile and Joan Holland)
Duchess of Gloucester
Thomas Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk
Bishop of Carlisle
Duke of Surrey
Bushy
Bagot
Green
Lord Ross
Earl of Salisbury
Lord Berkeley
1 Henry IV
Henry IV
Prince Hal
Henry 'Hotspur' Percy
Sir John Falstaff
Ned Poins
Mistress Quickly
Bardolph
Thomas Percy, Earl of Worcester
Earl of Douglas
Sir Walter Blunt
Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland
Lady Percy
Earl of Westmorland
Owen Glendower
Edmund Mortimer
Lady Mortimer
Archbishop of York
John, Duke of Bedford
Battle of Humbleton Hill
Battle of Shrewsbury
2 Henry IV
Henry IV
Prince Hal
Sir John Falstaff
Ned Poins
Ancient Pistol
Bardolph
Mistress Quickly
Doll Tearsheet
Robert Shallow
Earl of Westmorland
Archbishop of York
John, Duke of Bedford
Earl of Warwick
Lord Chief Justice
Lord Bardolf
Earl of Northumberland
Lord Mowbray
Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester
Thomas, Duke of Clarence
Earl of Surrey
Rumour
Henry V
Henry V
King of France
Louis the Dauphin
Fluellen
Ancient Pistol
Mistress Quickly
Bardolph
Corporal Nym
Katharine
Constable of France
Chorus
Duke of Exeter
John, Duke of Bedford
Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester
Thomas, Duke of Clarence
Earl of Westmorland
Duke of Orléans
Duke of Burgundy
Duke of York
Earl of Salisbury
Earl of Warwick
Duke of Bourbon
Archbishop of Canterbury
Bishop of Ely
Queen Isabel
Earl of Cambridge
Lord Scroop
Sir Thomas Grey
Michael Williams
Sir Thomas Erpingham
Duke of Berry
Battle of Agincourt
On screen
Richard II
King Richard II (1954; TV)
An Age of Kings (1960; TV)
The Life and Death of King Richard II (1960; TV)
King Richard the Second (1978; TV)
Richard the Second (2001)
The Hollow Crown: Richard II (2012; TV)
1 Henry IV
An Age of Kings (1960; TV)
Chimes at Midnight (1966)
The First Part of King Henry the Fourth, with the life and death of Henry surnamed Hotspur (1979; TV)
The Hollow Crown: Henry IV, Part 1 (2012; TV)
2 Henry IV
An Age of Kings (1960; TV)
Chimes at Midnight (1966)
The Second Part of King Henry the Fourth containing his Death: and the Coronation of King Henry the Fift (1979; TV)
The Hollow Crown: Henry IV, Part 2 (2012)
Henry V
Henry V (1944)
An Age of Kings (1960; TV)
Chimes at Midnight (1966)
The Life of Henry the Fift (1979; TV)
Henry V (1989)
The Hollow Crown: Henry V (2012)
Sources
Holinshed's Chronicles
The Famous Victories of Henry V (c.1585)
Thomas of Woodstock/Richard the Second, Part One (c.1593)
Related plays
The Merry Wives of Windsor (c.1597)
Sir John Oldcastle (1599)
Falstaff's Wedding (1760)
Related music
Falstaff (1913)
At the Boar's Head (1925)
Suite from Henry V (1963)
Historical context
Hundred Years' War
Wars of the Roses
Divine right of kings
Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex
John Oldcastle
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's first historical tetralogy
Henry VI, Part 1
Henry VI, Part 2
Henry VI, Part 3
Richard III
Characters and events
1 Henry VI
Henry VI
Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester
Duke of Exeter
Lord Talbot
Duke of Bedford
Richard, Duke of York
Bishop of Winchester
Earl of Suffolk
Duke of Somerset (conflation of John Beaufort, 1st Duke of Somerset and Edmund Beaufort, 2nd Duke of Somerset)
Earl of Warwick
Earl of Salisbury
John Talbot
Edmund Mortimer, Earl of March (conflation of Sir Edmund Mortimer and Edmund Mortimer, 5th Earl of March)
Sir John Fastolf
Charles the Dauphin
Joan la Pucelle
Margaret of Anjou
Reignier, Duke of Anjou
Duke of Alençon
Bastard of Orléans
Duke of Burgundy
Jacques d'Arc
Siege of Orléans
Battle of Patay
2 Henry VI
Henry VI
Queen Margaret
Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester
Richard, Duke of York
Earl of Salisbury
Earl of Warwick
Cardinal of Winchester
Duke of Suffolk
Duke of Buckingham
Jack Cade
Duke of Somerset (conflation of John Beaufort, 1st Duke of Somerset and Edmund Beaufort, 2nd Duke of Somerset)
Duchess of Gloucester
Edward Plantagenet
Richard Plantagenet
Lord Clifford
Young Clifford
Margery Jourdayne
Lord Saye
Lord Scales
First Battle of St Albans
Peasants' Revolt
3 Henry VI
Henry VI
Queen Margaret
Richard, Duke of York
Earl of Warwick
Edward IV
Richard, Duke of Gloucester
George, Duke of Clarence
Edward, Prince of Wales
Lord Clifford
Lady Grey
Montague
Earl of Oxford
Duke of Somerset (conflation of Henry Beaufort, 3rd Duke of Somerset and Edmund Beaufort, 4th Duke of Somerset)
Lord Hastings
Sir William Stanley
Earl of Northumberland
Duke of Exeter
Duke of Norfolk
Earl of Westmorland
Lord Rivers
Edmund, Earl of Rutland
Henry, Earl of Richmond
Louis XI of France
Bona of Savoy
Prince Edward
Earl of Pembroke
Lord Stafford
Lord Bourbon
Battle of Towton
Battle of Barnet
Battle of Wakefield
Second Battle of St Albans
Battle of Tewkesbury
Richard III
Richard III
Duke of Buckingham
Queen Elizabeth
Duchess of York
Queen Margaret
Lady Neville
George, Duke of Clarence
Edward IV
Lord Hastings
Lord Stanley, Earl of Derby
Henry Tudor, Earl of Richmond
Sir William Catesby
Sir Richard Ratcliffe
Lord Rivers
Marquis of Dorset
Sir James Tyrrell
Lord Richard Grey
Prince Edward
Richard, Duke of York
Earl of Warwick
Countess of Salisbury
Duke of Norfolk
Archbishop of Canterbury
Archbishop of York
Earl of Surrey
Sir Thomas Vaughan
Sir Christopher
Robert Brackenbury
Lord Lovel
Ghost of Henry VI
Ghost of Edward, Prince of Wales
Lord Mayor of London
Earl of Oxford
Sir James Blunt
Sir William Brandon
Bishop of Ely
Sheriff of Wiltshire
Wars of the Roses
Princes in the Tower
Battle of Bosworth Field
On screen
1 Henry VI
An Age of Kings (1960; TV)
The Wars of the Roses (1965; TV)
The First Part of Henry the Sixt (1983; TV)
The Hollow Crown: Henry VI, Part 1 (2016; TV)
2 Henry VI
An Age of Kings (1960; TV)
The Wars of the Roses (1965; TV)
The Second Part of Henry the Sixt (1983; TV)
The Hollow Crown: Henry VI, Part 1 & Henry VI, Part 2 (2016; TV)
3 Henry VI
An Age of Kings (1960; TV)
The Wars of the Roses (1965; TV)
The Third Part of Henry the Sixt (1983; TV)
The Hollow Crown: Henry VI, Part 2 (2016; TV)
Richard III
The Life and Death of King Richard III (1912)
Richard III (1955)
An Age of Kings (1960; TV)
The Wars of the Roses (1965; TV)
The Tragedy of Richard III (1983; TV)
"The Foretelling" (1983; TV)
"King Richard III" (1994; TV)
Richard III (1995)
Looking for Richard (1996)
Richard III (2007)
The Hollow Crown: Richard III (2016; TV)
Sources
The Mirror for Magistrates (1559)
Holinshed's Chronicles (1577)
Richardus Tertius (1580)
The Spanish Tragedy
The True Tragedy of Richard III (c.1590)
Historical context
Hundred Years' War
Wars of the Roses
House of Plantagenet
House of York
House of Lancaster
Related
"Even a worm will turn"
The Tragical History of King Richard the Third (1699)
David Garrick as Richard III (1745)
v
t
e
William Shakespeare's Henry VIII
Characters
Henry VIII
Cardinal Wolsey
Queen Katherine
Anne Bullen
Duke of Buckingham
Thomas Cranmer
Stephen Gardiner
Lord Chamerlain
Duke of Norfolk
Duke of Suffolk
Earl of Surrey
Cardinal Campeius
Capucius
Thomas Cromwell
Lord Sands
Lord Abergavenny
Lord Chancellor
Bishop of Lincoln
Thomas Lovell
Henry Guildford
Nicholas Vaux
Anthony Denny
Dr. Butts
Garter King-of-Arms
Sources
Thomas Wolsey, Late Cardinall, his Lyffe and Deathe (1558)
Holinshed's Chronicles (1577)
Adaptations
Henry VIII (1911)
The Famous History of the Life of King Henry the Eight (1979)
This article is part of a series on Information security Related security categories Internet security Cyberwarfare Computer security Mobile security Network security Threats Computer crime Vulnerability Eavesdropping Malware Spyware Ransomware Trojans Viruses Worms Rootkits Bootkits Keyloggers Screen scrapers Exploits Backdoors Logic bombs Payloads Denial of service Defenses Computer access control Application security Antivirus software Secure coding Secure by default Secure by design Secure operating systems Authentication Multi-factor authentication Authorization Data-centric security Encryption Firewall Intrusion detection system Mobile secure gateway Runtime application self-protection (RASP) v t e Information security , sometimes shortened to InfoSec , is the practice of preventing unauthorized access, use, disclosure, disruption, modification, inspection, recording or destruction of information. Th...
The Volkswagen Group MQB platform is the company's strategy for shared modular design construction of its transverse, front-engine, front-wheel-drive layout (optional front-engine, four-wheel-drive layout) automobiles. Volkswagen spent roughly $60bn [1] developing this new platform and the cars employing it. The platform underpins a wide range of cars from the supermini class to the mid size SUV class. MQB allows Volkswagen to assemble any of its cars based on this platform across all of its MQB ready factories. This allows the Volkswagen group flexibility to shift production as needed between its different factories. Beginning in 2012, Volkswagen Group marketed the strategy under the code name MQB , which stands for Modularer Querbaukasten , translating from German to "Modular Transversal Toolkit" or "Modular Transverse Matrix". [2] [3] MQB is one strategy within VW's overall MB (Modularer Baukasten or modular matrix) program which also includes th...
Comments
Post a Comment