$25 $25 poooooooo
It depended on whether you wanted a seat or not. If you were prepared to stand through the show, you only had to pay a penny. To get a seat was tuppence (two pennies). A pound in 1600 was worth about 123 1996 pounds and there were 240 pennies to the pound, so a penny would have been about 51p in 1996 money. Pretty cheap.
The tickets at the Globe theate depended on where you sat. If you sat on the higher class chairs you would pay 6 pence (equivalent to a week's wage) if you stood at the yard or the pit which was the lower class seating you would pay 1 pence.
It cost one Penny to watch a play in "the pit" while standing. It would cost several more pennys to watch from one of the three galleries.
1 penny to watch from the pit and roughly 2 pennies to watch from the upper levels
In the Globe Theatre charges are based on visibility. Today it would cost £5 to stand in the yard for a play there.
globe theatre
blowjobs
Two or three pence depending on the seat. If you only had a penny, you could see the play, but you didn't get a seat.
the last play to be perfomed at the globe theatre was king Henry VI
In the Globe Theatre charges are based on visibility. Today it would cost £5 to stand in the yard for a play there.
globe theatre
blowjobs
Two or three pence depending on the seat. If you only had a penny, you could see the play, but you didn't get a seat.
the last play to be perfomed at the globe theatre was king Henry VI
6-10 shillings a play
it depends. what theatre and what play?
At the Globe Theatre in Shakespeare's day it cost at least tuppence to get a seat. You could get admission for a penny but not a seat. At the Blackfriars indoor theatre the prices were steeper.
You can find out by attending a play at Shakespeare's Globe in London or in another replica of an Elizabethan theatre.
For groundlings, a penny. If you wanted the fancy seats, two or three pence.
Well, the owners of the Globe, of course.
9bc