A Midsummer Night's Dream
- William Shakespeare
Сomedy" A Midsummer's Night Dream" is a awful piece of work written by a genius English playwright William Shakespeare. Three veritably entertaining stories tightly connected with each other fascinate the anthology with multitudinous love adventures. The reason for that's a potion of a timber spirit elf.
William Shakespeare is the author of the world notorious sonnets and plays Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, Macbeth and Othello, as well as slapsticks Twelfth Night, A Midsummer's Night Dream, Love’s Labour's Lost, The Merry women of Windsor, The Two Gentlemen of Verona and As You Like It. William Shakespeare is the most performed playwright, the workshop of the great English minstrel have been on top of the world theatre stages for some centuries formerly.
About the author
William Shakespeare was born in April 1564 in the city of Stratford- upon- Avon, on England’s Avon River. When he was eighteen, he married Anne Hathaway. The couple had three children — an aged son Susanna and halves, Judith and Hamnet. Hamnet, Shakespeare’s only son, failed in nonage. The bulk of Shakespeare’s working life was spent in the theater world of London, where he established himself professionally by the early 1590s. He enjoyed success not only as a playwright and minstrel, but also as an actor and shareholder in an acting company. Although some suppose that eventually between 1610 and 1613 Shakespeare retired from the theater and returned home to Stratford, where he failed in 1616, others believe that he may have continued to work in London until close to his death.
BarbaraA. Mowat is Director of Research emerita at the Folger Shakespeare Library, Consulting Editor of Shakespeare Quarterly, and author of The Dramaturgy of Shakespeare’s loves and of essays on Shakespeare’s plays and their editing.
Paul Werstine is Professor of English at the Graduate School and at King’s University College at Western University. He's a general editor of the New Variorum Shakespeare and author of Early Modern Playhouse Calligraphies and the Editing of Shakespeare and of numerous papers and papers on the printing and editing of Shakespeare’s plays.
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