Possibly never. Romeo and Juliet was written about five years before the Globe Theatre was built. Our information about which plays were performed at the Globe is extremely sparse and consists mostly of people who wrote in their diaries "Today I saw a play at the Globe theatre called Cymbeline." Romeo and Juliet is one play for which there are no performance records at the Globe so we cannot be sure it was played there even once.
"Romeo and Juliet" was likely performed at the Globe Theatre during Shakespeare's time, but the exact number of performances is unknown. The play was popular during that era so it would have been staged multiple times, though the specific number is not recorded.
The globe theater was Shakespeare's theater. Plays like Romeo and Juliet and Hamlet were peformed there.
I don't know. Maybe, Twelfth Night and Romeo and Juliet?
Not in The Globe Theatre, that's for certain. Romeo and Juliet was published two years before the Globe was built. Likely it was one of the plays Shakespeare wrote shortly after the Lord Chamberlain's Men was formed, and thus would have had its first performance in James Burbage's Theatre or in The Curtain Playhouse.
Yeh, i think it was...
they preformed it in 1849
Scholars believe that Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet was written and first performed in 1594 or 1595.
The play "Romeo and Juliet" by William Shakespeare is set in Verona, Italy, during the 14th century. It is centered around the tragic love story between the title characters from rival families, the Montagues and the Capulets.
There was only one stage for the Globe. It was 42 feet wide and extended out 27 feet into the pit or yard. There was an upper deck where some scenes were played, such as the balcony scene in Romeo & Juliet.
Kraft Television Theatre - 1947 Romeo and Juliet 7-41 was released on: USA: 9 June 1954
There is no reference to theatre-goers of any kind in Romeo and Juliet. There is in Hamlet, though: they are called "groundlings"
Stamford Theatre Company. has written: 'Stamford Theatre Company presents 'Romeo and Juliet' by William Shakespeare'
The theatre that Shakespeare is mainly associated with is the Globe Theatre. However, it is important to remember that the Globe Theatre was not even built until many years after Shakespeare started writing plays, and that a lot of his most famous plays (including Romeo and Juliet, A Midsummer Night's Dream, and Henry V) were made famous in other theatres, especially The Curtain.