They were called groundlings.
One penny.
The groundlings were people who paid for standing room tickets which entitled them to stand on the floor and watch the play. At the Globe these cost a penny.
They were called groundlings. They used to stand on the ground for hours to watch the plays. They never went to the toilet either, because there weren't any.
if you wanted to stand it cost a penny and it cost 6 pennce in the lords rooms!
All of the people who bought one penny tickets to watch Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar at the Globe theatre stood up for the entire play.
One penny.
The groundlings were people who paid for standing room tickets which entitled them to stand on the floor and watch the play. At the Globe these cost a penny.
The Groundlings who stood too watch the play paid one penny; those who sat in the galleries paid three pence. Three to six pence was a day laborer's wage in most trades.
They were called groundlings. They used to stand on the ground for hours to watch the plays. They never went to the toilet either, because there weren't any.
No, not everybody stood. The poorer Elizabethans paid one penny to stand in the 'pit', which surrounded the stage on three sides, and the wealthier spectators paid two pennies to sit up in the galleries, which also surrounded the stage on three sides. The theatre was three stories high, each story had galleries and seating for the two-penny spectators. The seating was partially covered by the roof.
if you wanted to stand it cost a penny and it cost 6 pennce in the lords rooms!
All of the people who bought one penny tickets to watch Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar at the Globe theatre stood up for the entire play.
the pit was the bottom of the theater(in the center of the theater) where the poor people would stand to watch the plays.
in Elizabethan theater, an audience member who was usually standing in the cheap section. commoners paid one penny for a seat in Elizabethan theater, an audience member who was usually standing in the cheap section. commoners paid one penny for a seat
i dont know but could someone awnser
The Groundlings paid a penny to stand in the yard. [They were also called Penny Standers.] It cost another three pennies for a seat in the galleries, with an extra penny for a cushion. For a seat in the Lords Rooms, it would cost six pence. All prices were doubled on the day of a play's first performance. (Prices rose gradually from 1616 to 1642 when Parliament closed the theaters.)
In some places you would pay a penny and stand on the ground watching the play