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The general consensus is that there were two levels of seats under the roof, if those are the galleries you are asking about. The modern Globe has two and it looks like pictures of the original Globe. If you are talking about the gallery above the stage that was Juliet's balcony or the walls of Harfleur, there was only one.
it cost more to go into the galleries at the globe because of all the really expensive pictures
Many of the richer people who sat up in the galleries attended the Globe Theater in the 1600's but many poorer people attended the plays in the central yard also.
The Globe Theatre had two levels of balconies, known as the first and second galleries. Each balcony level offered seating for audience members to watch the performances.
The seating was the same as in the modern Globe: in three roofed galleries, one on top of the other, circling the stage.
Noble men were seated in galleries and brought cushions. The poor stood.
The Globe, like all elizabethan theatres, had a stage surrounded by a circle of galleries with seats. The space between the stage and the galleries, on all three sides, was called the pit, and that's where the groundlings stood. The related link shows a picture of a bunch of schoolkids standing in the Pit where the groundlings would have stood in the New Globe.
The Modern Globe theatre is based on the original design from Shakespears' time - so forget the heating. The audience is mainly standing, but there is some seating in the galleries.
the middle galleries are seats up against the wall in the middle of the wall in a theatre (e.g the Shakespeare's Globe Theatre) .
Well, I think there are 2300 galleries in the National Gallery
the middle galleries are seats up against the wall in the middle of the wall in a theatre (e.g the Shakespeare's globe theatre) .