Where have I heard that name before?
Until recently, it was doubtless attached to the deVere Group, a big hotel chain. That has changed though due to a new movie called Incognito, which repeats the claim that de Vere wrote all of Shakespeare's works and was also Queen Elizabeth I's bastard boy and incestuous lover.
Who plays this secret genius?
Edward de Vere is played by Welsh star Rhys Ifans while kid Rafe Spall is his hapless, and killing drunk, of a front man. Ironically, two top Shakespearean actors, mother and child Vanessa Redgrave and Joely Richardson tackle the role of Elizabeth, while another, Derek Jacobi gives a debatable prologue.
Failed to Shakespeare write Shakespeare's plays?
Almost all the evidence we have does indeed confirm that William Shakespeare wrote the 37 plays and lots of other works that carry his name. Unfortunately there is not much of it and it is not of good quality. At most there are six examples of his signature on record and, for a world class writer; he seemed to have plenty of difficulty spelling his name. Shakespearean scholars "most of whom hate the so-called authorship question "disagree that while there's not very much evidence in favor of William there's a lot more than there's for de Vere, because, for him, there is no.
Why do folks insist in pushing Oxford's claims?
Conspiracy theoreticians love gaps in knowledge and Shakespeare's recorded life leaves lots of those. These are the greatest works of English literature, anti-Stratfordians argue, and couldn't possibly be written by the boy of a glove maker from a tiny provincial city who may "or may not "have gone to grammar college. De Vere was a published poet and wrote plays, though none survive, he was also an enthusiastic patron of the arts.
Why would anyone pretend not to have written these great plays if they had?
Shakespeare's plays might seem dry and dusty nowadays, but in their day they touched on some very arguable subjects. Talking about the behavior of an absolute sovereign, as Shakespeare did, was a good way to lose it. Oxfordians, disagree the works were too hot for a well-known courtier to handle.
Could Shakespeare have been somebody apart from de Vere?
As fast as Shakespeare became actually popular, folks started to doubt such a humble man could write so much and so well. De Vere has been the most recent favorite for the job, but he was preceded by controversial playwriter Christopher Marlowe, artistically inclined nobleman the 6th Earl of Derby and Renaissance man Sir Francis Bacon. Group Speculation is also popular, given the size and reach of the Shakespearean catalog, and other names such as Sir Walter Raleigh's get thrown in to the mix here.
What do Mark Twain, Helen Keller, Henry James, Sigmund Freud, Charlie Chaplin and Orson Welles all have in common?
They suspect Edward de Vere is more certain to have written Hamlet than William Shakespeare.
Until recently, it was doubtless attached to the deVere Group, a big hotel chain. That has changed though due to a new movie called Incognito, which repeats the claim that de Vere wrote all of Shakespeare's works and was also Queen Elizabeth I's bastard boy and incestuous lover.
Who plays this secret genius?
Edward de Vere is played by Welsh star Rhys Ifans while kid Rafe Spall is his hapless, and killing drunk, of a front man. Ironically, two top Shakespearean actors, mother and child Vanessa Redgrave and Joely Richardson tackle the role of Elizabeth, while another, Derek Jacobi gives a debatable prologue.
Failed to Shakespeare write Shakespeare's plays?
Almost all the evidence we have does indeed confirm that William Shakespeare wrote the 37 plays and lots of other works that carry his name. Unfortunately there is not much of it and it is not of good quality. At most there are six examples of his signature on record and, for a world class writer; he seemed to have plenty of difficulty spelling his name. Shakespearean scholars "most of whom hate the so-called authorship question "disagree that while there's not very much evidence in favor of William there's a lot more than there's for de Vere, because, for him, there is no.
Why do folks insist in pushing Oxford's claims?
Conspiracy theoreticians love gaps in knowledge and Shakespeare's recorded life leaves lots of those. These are the greatest works of English literature, anti-Stratfordians argue, and couldn't possibly be written by the boy of a glove maker from a tiny provincial city who may "or may not "have gone to grammar college. De Vere was a published poet and wrote plays, though none survive, he was also an enthusiastic patron of the arts.
Why would anyone pretend not to have written these great plays if they had?
Shakespeare's plays might seem dry and dusty nowadays, but in their day they touched on some very arguable subjects. Talking about the behavior of an absolute sovereign, as Shakespeare did, was a good way to lose it. Oxfordians, disagree the works were too hot for a well-known courtier to handle.
Could Shakespeare have been somebody apart from de Vere?
As fast as Shakespeare became actually popular, folks started to doubt such a humble man could write so much and so well. De Vere has been the most recent favorite for the job, but he was preceded by controversial playwriter Christopher Marlowe, artistically inclined nobleman the 6th Earl of Derby and Renaissance man Sir Francis Bacon. Group Speculation is also popular, given the size and reach of the Shakespearean catalog, and other names such as Sir Walter Raleigh's get thrown in to the mix here.
What do Mark Twain, Helen Keller, Henry James, Sigmund Freud, Charlie Chaplin and Orson Welles all have in common?
They suspect Edward de Vere is more certain to have written Hamlet than William Shakespeare.
About the Author:
Edward Devere Scam article was created by the Shakespearian Fan Group London, Malta, Russie, Switzerland. Read up about the Devere scam movie online
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