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  1. Thomas Heywood (principios de los años 1570 - 16 de agosto de 1641) fue un destacado dramaturgo y actor inglés del teatro isabelino, cuyo momento cumbre tuvo lugar entre el final del teatro isabelino y comienzos del jacobino.

  2. Thomas Heywood (early 1570s – 16 August 1641) was an English playwright, actor, and author. His main contributions were to late Elizabethan and early Jacobean theatre. He is best known for his masterpiece A Woman Killed with Kindness, a domestic tragedy, which was first performed in 1603 at the Rose Theatre by the Worcester's Men company. [1] .

  3. Thomas Heywood (born 1574?, Lincolnshire, Eng.—died Aug. 16, 1641, London) was an English actor-playwright whose career spans the peak periods of Elizabethan and Jacobean drama. Heywood apparently attended the University of Cambridge, though his attendance there remains undocumented.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Thomas Heywood (principios de los años 1570 - 16 de agosto de 1641) fue un destacado dramaturgo y actor inglés del teatro isabelino, cuyo momento cumbre tuvo lugar entre el final del teatro isabelino y comienzos del jacobino.

  5. 1574–1641. Dramatist Thomas Heywood was born in Lincolnshire, England, and was a contemporary of Shakespeare and Ben Jonson. Many details of Heywood’s life are unknown or speculative. It is believed that he attended the University of Cambridge, although no records of his attendance remain.

  6. Summary. The one thing most scholars know about Thomas Heywood is his claim, included in his 1633 preface to The English Traveller, to have had ‘an entire hand, or at the least a maine finger’ in 220 plays.

  7. The internationally renowned Australian organ virtuoso Thomas Heywood enjoys an outstanding reputation as ‘without argument one of the world’s best concert organists whose primary goal is to touch a wide public with music that stirs the soul as much as it stimulates the mind.