yes
Shakespeare wrote a lot of plays about succession and transfer of political power because Queen Elizabeth had no children and it was somewhat up in the air what would happen after her death.
Julius Caesar.
In ancient Greek drama a chorus is a group of actors who commented on the action of the play in unison. Those plays were written hundreds of years before Julius Caesar lived. There is no chorus in Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar.
doesnt like plays. rarely smiles not comfortable with people of a higher rank Caesar dislikes Cassius very much. He says that Cassius thinks too much and is therefore dangerous. Caesar is suspicious of him because he does not delight in things such as plays and music, and hardly ever smiles. He states that Cassius is to be feared, rather than outright saying he fears him.
You can watch many episodes of Spartacus on Netflix.
Andy Whitfield's wife. He plays Spartacus in STARZ Spartacus: Blood and Sand"
craig parker
Zacky Vengeance plays rhythm guitar.
skyler samuels
Zacky Vengeance plays rhythm guitar and Synyster Gates plays lead guitar.
Historical events or historical figures are often a source of literature. Writers have taken historical giants such as Julius Caesar to create plays about this figure as did Shakespeare in his epic play Julius Caesar. Screen writing has given us films from Spartacus to Cleopatra. The writer's purpose is not to be a historian but rather to enrich a story about love, power, and struggle.
Zacky Vengeance plays the melody guitar on Warmness on the Soul.
Caesar Rayford plays for the Dallas Cowboys.
Julius Caesar did not write any plays. He was a Roman general and statesman who lived from 100 - 44 BCE. The play "Julius Caesar" was written by William Shakespeare and is a dramatization of Caesar's assassination and its aftermath.
Caesar Rayford plays Defensive End for the Dallas Cowboys.
None: although Caesar wrote accounts of his campaigns (his Gallic War being a classic in its field), he did not write drama. Seneca, Terence and Plautus wrote plays in his day, not Caesar.