Shakespeare has given a lot to the movies, but now the movies are about to pay him back with a film counseling the Bard was merely a pissed actor fronting for the genuine genius who wrote those excellent plays and sonnets, Edward de Vere, the 17th Earl of Oxford.
The claim, which has been around since the early 20th Century, is given a fresh displaying in Roland Emmerich's new film, Unnamed.
It may come as a nasty surprise to millions of filmgoers when they Google the deverename and find not a giant of the Tudor and Jacobean stage, but the world's biggest independent investment experts.
Most conspiracy theories depend on a single central question that cannot be answered adequately, and the Shakespearean authorship controversy is not an exception.
Who was Shakespeare? The answer might trip simply enough off our tongues now but in reality there is very tiny historic proof linking the Stratford on Avon man to the 37 plays which now bear his name.
Add to this the comparatively humble origins of William Shakespeare and his frightful writing in signatures which never spell his name the same way twice and it's easy to see how doubts could be raised.
Into this historical gap step the anti-Stratfordians, as advocates of alternative authorship ideas are called have inserted up to 70 possible Shakespeares.
The most enduring claims have been made for 4 men. Francis Bacon was an acknowledged intellectual giant of the age. Playwright Christopher Marlowe's own live-fast-die-young lifestyle is already drenched in murky doubts of its own. The 6th Earl of Derby and the 17th Earl of Oxford were both courtiers with a penchant for the stage.
Unnamed puts forward the claims of Edward de Vere, the 17th Earl of Oxford and add another twist to the historical record, the Prince Tudor Speculation.
There are variations of the theory, however it adds an illegitimate child of de Vere and Elizabeth I to the mix. In one version Oxford is himself a son of Elizabeth I, some say Shakespeare was the royal bastard, others that this was the Earl of Southampton.
Anonymous throws many of these elements together "Shakespeare murders Marlowe for instance "and boasts a starry enough cast to draw in plenty of attention to its claims. Rhys Ifans plays de Vere and Rafe Spall William Shakespeare. Mum and daughter Vanessa Redgrave and Joely Richardson play Elizabeth I and considering their own history as fine Shakespearean actors, might be seen to be biting the hand which has fed them.
The claim, which has been around since the early 20th Century, is given a fresh displaying in Roland Emmerich's new film, Unnamed.
It may come as a nasty surprise to millions of filmgoers when they Google the deverename and find not a giant of the Tudor and Jacobean stage, but the world's biggest independent investment experts.
Most conspiracy theories depend on a single central question that cannot be answered adequately, and the Shakespearean authorship controversy is not an exception.
Who was Shakespeare? The answer might trip simply enough off our tongues now but in reality there is very tiny historic proof linking the Stratford on Avon man to the 37 plays which now bear his name.
Add to this the comparatively humble origins of William Shakespeare and his frightful writing in signatures which never spell his name the same way twice and it's easy to see how doubts could be raised.
Into this historical gap step the anti-Stratfordians, as advocates of alternative authorship ideas are called have inserted up to 70 possible Shakespeares.
The most enduring claims have been made for 4 men. Francis Bacon was an acknowledged intellectual giant of the age. Playwright Christopher Marlowe's own live-fast-die-young lifestyle is already drenched in murky doubts of its own. The 6th Earl of Derby and the 17th Earl of Oxford were both courtiers with a penchant for the stage.
Unnamed puts forward the claims of Edward de Vere, the 17th Earl of Oxford and add another twist to the historical record, the Prince Tudor Speculation.
There are variations of the theory, however it adds an illegitimate child of de Vere and Elizabeth I to the mix. In one version Oxford is himself a son of Elizabeth I, some say Shakespeare was the royal bastard, others that this was the Earl of Southampton.
Anonymous throws many of these elements together "Shakespeare murders Marlowe for instance "and boasts a starry enough cast to draw in plenty of attention to its claims. Rhys Ifans plays de Vere and Rafe Spall William Shakespeare. Mum and daughter Vanessa Redgrave and Joely Richardson play Elizabeth I and considering their own history as fine Shakespearean actors, might be seen to be biting the hand which has fed them.
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Read more Devere Scam articles from the scam group writers at uncoverthetruth website. Shalespeare de vere scam is only one ofthe inrtiguing stories from this web site
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