I grew up seeing most productions of Shakespeare in three nearby states (PA, NJ, and NY) and Canada and England. My mother was a Shakespearean scholar (her dissertation was on Rosiland, including the people who portrayed her.) Before she died, I asked her, "Who wrote Shakespeare?" She promptly and emphatically answered, as indoctrinated at multiple Universities, "Shakespeare wrote Shakespeare!" Sorry, Mom, I have learned otherwise. When the truth of the author(s) becomes known, understood, and accepted, the puzzle pieces will fall into place in a way that very few know now. As a hint, there was one who led a group. He lived his life on stage in multple aliases and masks. He mingled with all classes of people, from the lowliest, most pitiful, and/or ignorant to the highest and mightiest, leading their countries. This is why his characters have the range that they do. He wanted to educate the masses. This explains the range of audience appeal, even those who don't understand the language ( and I'm not referringto English speaking people but those of foreign tongues). He shows us how it's best to accept others, showing gentleness and how cooperation and expansion of ideas spell the answer to adversity. He is a teacher in humanity. I enjoyed your ideas. Thank you.