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The
Life of William Shakespeare
In a flamboyant age and a notoriously self-promoting profession – he
was an active member of a theatre company for at least twenty years – Shakespeare
was noticeably reticent. As a result, despite scholars’ painstaking
research, much speculation remains possible about a life which is traditionally
said to have begun on St George’s Day, 23 April 1564.
Shakespeare was born in Stratford-upon-Avon, where
his father was a prosperous glover who would in 1565 be promoted to
the rank of alderman. It is reasonable to assume that such a relatively
affluent man would send his son to the grammar school in Stratford,
and Shakespeare’s
many mythological and classical references bear out this conjecture.
While it is unlikely that he went on to university, it is known that
Shakespeare married Anne Hathaway in 1582. The couple had two daughters,
Susanna and Judith, and one son, Hamnet, who died in 1596.
Virtually nothing is known of Shakespeare’s life from 1585 to
1592, although he was sufficiently established as a playwright by 1592
to be satirised in print by Robert Greene as the challengingly versatile ‘upstart
Crow’. The theatre in London was entering its most brilliant
and productive phase, and by 1594, when he found sufficient money and
professional commitment to purchase a share in the newly formed Lord
Chamberlain’s Men, Shakespeare had probably written his three
early comedies, The Comedy of Errors, The
Two Gentlemen of Verona and
The Taming of the Shrew, a corpse-laden Senecan tragedy, Titus
Andronicus,
and a large share of the three Henry VI plays, to which Richard
III provided a wonderfully original conclusion. He had also reached a fashionable
audience with his two narrative poems, Venus and
Adonis (1593) and
The Rape of Lucrece (1594), probably written in response to the plague
that had shut down the theatres for a time. Later poetry included the
incomparable Sonnets (published in 1609 but probably written much earlier)
and The Phoenix and the Turtle (1601).
Living in the region of Bishopsgate, not far from the Theatre, Shakespeare
continued to write plays at the rate of approximately two per year.
The period 1594-8 may have seen the first productions of King
John,
the middle comedies Love’s Labour’s Lost, A
Midsummer Night’s
Dream and The Merchant of Venice, the hugely popular Romeo
and Juliet and the cycle of history plays comprising Richard
II, the two parts
of Henry IV and Henry V. That the playwright also had aspirations as
a gentleman, and ample means to support them, is apparent in the successful
application – on his father’s behalf – for a coat
of arms in 1596. The following year, Shakespeare bought one of Stratford’s
finest houses, New Place, and two years later contributed to the establishment
of the Globe on the south bank of the Thames.
Shakespeare wrote his greatest plays during the new theatre’s
first decade. They include the mature comedies, Much
Ado About Nothing (probably dating from 1598), As
You Like It and Twelfth Night; the ‘problem
plays’, All’s Well That Ends Well, Measure
for Measure and Troilus and
Cressida; a comic pot-boiler, The Merry
Wives of Windsor,
perhaps written in response to Queen Elizabeth’s demands for
more about Falstaff; and the succession of great tragedies, Julius
Caesar, Hamlet, Othello, King
Lear, Macbeth, Antony
and Cleopatra,
Coriolanus and Timon of Athens. This was also the period that saw the
Lord Chamberlain’s Men honoured by the new monarch, James I,
with the title the King’s Men, and confirmed in their ascendancy
at Court.
But theatrical fashions were changing, and the arrival
on the scene of new talents like Beaumont and Fletcher had Shakespeare
looking to his well-established laurels. He joined the rest of the
King’s
Men in investing in an indoor playhouse at Blackfriars, perhaps recognising
the greater scenic scope offered by indoor playing. His last plays,
Pericles, Cymbeline, The
Winter’s Tale and The Tempest, are
tragi-comic romances, which acknowledge even as they transcend the
growing interest in spectacle, magic and improbable resolutions. Collaborations
with John Fletcher on Henry VIII and The
Two Noble Kinsman suggest a dulling of interest or creativity, and Shakespeare
progressively loosened his ties to London. Having presumably spent
his final years at New Place, William Shakespeare died on his birthday,
23 April 1616, and was buried in the place of his baptism, Stratford’s
Holy Trinity Church. The earliest collected edition of his plays, the First
Folio, was published
in 1623, and its prefatory verse-tributes include Ben Jonson’s
famous declaration, ‘He was not of an age, but for all time’.
Further information – and some fascinating speculations – about
Shakespeare’s life can be found in the excellent biography
by Stephen Greenblatt, Will in the World (Pimlico, 2005).
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