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crossref-it.info - AS/A2 English Literature Study Guides - texts in context.

 

1594 - 1611: William Shakespeare's Life In London, part 2

William Shakespeare's personal loss

Hamnet, Shakespeare’s only son, who had stayed in Stratford with his mother, died in August 1596, aged 11. He had probably lived with his mother and sisters in his grandfather’s house, since William continued to write for the London stage.

William Shakespeare's playwriting success

The new Globe Theatre

In 1597, the lease of the land on which The Theatre was built had expired, and the landlord would not renew it. The company temporarily moved to another playhouse, The Curtain. However, as the actual materials of The Theatre were not owned by the landlord, in the winter of 1598 Burbage’s sons secretly dismantled the whole building. They shipped the materials across the River Thames to a new site in Southwark, on the south bank of the river. Here the theatre was rebuilt as The Globe. 

More on the Globe: It is possible to see what this theatre was like by visiting its replica in London. This was built at the end of the twentieth century, under the guidance of the American actor Sam Wannamaker, on a site very close to the original; its company plays to packed houses each summer.

NEXT - William Shakespeare's Life in London, part 3