All of them except the ones with really bad haemorrhoids.
If you want to know how many could be seated in a particular theatre, you had better specify the theatre.
It is believed that people could indeed buy snacks from fruit vendors during the show. Apples and pears were both common fruits at the time.
1380 people can be seated but another 700 can stand as well!
About 30 years.
It could hold 3000 but they weren't all seated. Many of them had to stand.
none, only men could be in plays during the time that Shakespeare was around.
The theatre would run a flag up the flagpole if there was a play toward.
There were over 1500 people and the Globe Theatre was outdoors. Some say it could hold as many as 3000 people but a lot of them would not have been seated. The standing room seats were quite popular.
The original 34 rows of seats at the Theatre in Epidauros was extended by another 21 rows in Roman times. This meant that about 15,000 spectators could be seated in the theatre.
People watching Shakespeare's plays would either be sitting or standing. If the people had extra money they could pay for the privilege of sitting during the play. The poorer people would have to stand in the theater pit to watch the play but there tickets were much cheaper.
Records in diaries and so on suggest that people at Elizabethan theatre performances, which presumably includes performances of Shakespeare's plays, ate apples and oranges, hazelnuts and gingerbread. They could get beer in bottles.
Yes, in Shakespeares time.
Julius Caesar remodeled it and enlarged it to hold 150,000 people.