The Plays of William Shakespeare The plays written by William Shakespeare are listed below by category and alphabetical order. The section relating to the Chronology of Plays provides a list of when plays were written and published. This section provides access to the plot summary of each play, pictures, key dates, characters, history and the full script of every one of William Shakespeare's plays. History themed Plays Click a link below to access full scripts and information about Shakespeare's PlaysTragedy themed Plays Click a link below to access full scripts and information about Shakespeare's Plays Comedy themed Plays Click a link below to access full scripts and information about Shakespeare's Plays Registration of Plays Plays were required to be registered prior to publication. It was important that plays were regulated as playwrights used the stage as a forum to express their own views on religion and politics. Registration provided an opportunity to invoke a form of censorship and the means to suppress too much freedom of thought and criticism of the crown and public affairs. Information provided about the plays | |
The "Bard" William Shakespeare never published any of his plays and therefore none of the original manuscripts have survived. Eighteen unauthorised versions of William Shakespeare's plays were, however, published during his lifetime in quarto editions by unscrupulous publishers (there were no copyright laws protecting Shakespeare and his works during the Elizabethan era). A collection of William Shakespear's works did not appear until 1623 (a full seven years after William Shakespeare's death on April 23, 1616) when two of his fellow actors, John Hemminges and Henry Condell, posthumously recorded his work and published 36 of William Shakespeare's plays in the First Folio. Some dates are therefore approximate other dates are substantiated by historical events, records of performances and the dates plays appeared in print. The Characters and Scripts These enduring works feature many famous and well loved characters. The text and scripts convey vivid impressions. The language used today is, in many ways, different to that used in the 16th century Elizabethan era and this is often reflected in the script and text used in the plays. It is therefore not surprising that we have no experience or understanding of some of the words contained in the text / script of the various works. We have therefore included a Shakespearean Dictionary for most of the more obscure words used in the script of his plays, some of which are obsolete in modern language or Dictionaries. Make a note of any unusual words that you encounter whilst reading the scripts and check their definition in the Dictionary by clicking Dictionary at the top of the page to access Elizabethan Dictionary - Guide to language and words used in the Elizabethan era. Chronology of Plays The section relating to the Chronology of Plays by William Shakespeare provides a list of when plays were written and published. This section provides access to the plot summary of each of the plays, pictures, key dates, characters, history and the full script of every one of the William Shakespeare plays. Chronology of Plays - First performance and publications Editions of William Shakespeare Plays This selection of Collections of William Shakespeare conveys the number of different editions of the Plays of the Bard that have been published. Editions may vary in content and variations are generally detailed and explained in the modern forewords of the 1623 The First Folio (F1) 1632 The Second Folio (F2) 1663 The Third Folio (F3) Second issue of the F3 in the following year includes Pericles. 1685 The Fourth Folio (F4) 1709 Nicholas Rowe's edition 1723-25 Alexander Pope's edition. 1733 Lewis Theobald's edition. 1734-5 Robert Walker's small-format editions of the individual plays 1734-6 Jacob Tonson 1743-4 Thomas Hanmer's edition. 1747 William Warburton's edition. 1765 Samuel Johnson's edition. 1767-8 Edward Capell's edition. 1773 George Stevens's revision of Samuel Johnson's edition. 1773-4 John Bell's edition - Based on the prompt books then being used in the London theatres. 1778 Isaac Reed's revision of Stevens's Johnson edition. 1790 Edmond Malone's edition. 1791-1802 J. & J. Boydell's edition. 1795 First American edition published at Philadelphia. 1807 Francis Douce's edition 1821 A revised edition of Malone, prepared by James Boswell. 1822-23 Pickering edition. 1838-43 Charles Knight's edition. 1859-60 Mary Cowden Clarke's edition. 1863-6 Clark, Wright and Glover Cambridge University Press edition. 1870-1911 William J. Rolfe edition 1899-1931 W. J. Craig and R. H. Case's 'The Arden Shake-speare'. 1921-66 John Dover Wilson and Arthur Quiller-Couch's 'New Cambridge Shake-speare'. 1937-59 George B. Harrison's 'Penguin Shake-speare'. 1951 Peter Alexander's edition. 1956-67 Alfred Harbage's 'Pelican Shake-speare'. 1974 G. Blakemore Evans's 'Riverside Shakes-peare'.The edition most widely used among US colleges 1986 Stanley Wells and Gary Taylor's 'Oxford Shake-speare'. 1995- Richard Proudfoot, Ann Thompson and David Scott Kastan's revision of the Arden (now known as 'Arden 3'). First Folio - Description of William Shakespeare Quarto Texts and first published plays as Comedies, Histories and Tragedies |