it would cost 20 shillings
Groundlings paid a penny to stand around the stage. Seats went for three pence in the galleries. Lords Rooms cost more.
Opening in 1599 (South of the River Thames) by the company in which Shakespeare held a stake, the Globe Theatre was a huge success, paving the way for other amphitheatres to provide for the entertainment of Londoners. It had an audience capacity of 1,500+ with the surrounding grounds' capacity swelling to 3,000. Built in smaller scale, but the same architectural style of the Colloseum in Rome, Italy, the Globe Theatre hosted bear-baiting and gambling events.
Spectacular special effects included realcannon fire, smoke, fireworks, and even aerialists dropping in from the rigging overhead! It was a huge success!
Groundlings paid a penny to stand around the stage. Seats went for three pence in the galleries. Lords Rooms cost more.
one coin to be a ground ling standing on the ground & 2 coins to sit in the galleries which had shelter& an extra coin to get a pillow in the gallery.
1 penny for the good seats, and 1/2 penny for the groundlings (people who stood)
1000 pounds
The entertainment is much more brighter + funnier, i suppose. if wrong, look it up plz. thx
100 $
Queen Elizabeth never set foot in the Globe Theatre, that was for lower class citizens. She dud, however have private plays and performances in her private chambers. Shakespeare performed for her 14 times.
$7.25
In Elizabethan England the term madness was oft used to denote something similar to the current Merriam-Webster definition of the term - "behavior or thinking that is very foolish or dangerous." But much the same as it's usage today, the term is subjective. It usually specified a lack of ability to reason. And to be reasonable at the time was to conform to the Christian/Aristotelian world view that included a reverence and appreciation of virtue and condemnation of sin as essential to the preservation of earthly and by extension cosmic order.Further reading on the understanding of the Elizabethan world view:The Elizabethan World Picture - E.M.W. Tillyard
alot
The new Shakespeare's Globe Theatre in London, which is about twenty years old, was designed to look as much as possible like the Globe Theatre built in 1599. If you look for images of that theatre you will see what it looked like.
The outside of the original Globe Theatre looked very much like Sam Wanamaker's modern Globe theatre in Southwark. We don't know what the original Globe looked like inside. (The inside of the modern Globe is copied from some drawings we have of the inside of the Star - a slightly less famous Jacobean theatre).
$1,000,000. Each
the globe theater cost £1093 to build in 1599....
Well, of course, as much as we like to think of living theatre, theatres are not alive. The history of the Globe Theatre in London is as follows: First Globe: built in 1599, burned down 1613 Second Globe: built in 1614, torn down 1644 Third Globe: built in 1997
it wasn't there silly!
1000 ducats
it costed about 1 penny
5 pence
One-eighth.
At the time, the Globe Theatre would have cost over 1000£ to build. However keeping in mind that 1000£ was worth much more at the time, than it is today.