I don't know. Maybe, Twelfth Night and Romeo and Juliet?
The Globe Theatre where Shakespeare's plays were performed had two stages. The stage included the outside and the inside stage.
comedy and tragedy. comedy was funny and light hearted and the tragedy ones were serious and taught people a lesson
The Globe Theatre was built in 1599. The Puritans shut the theatre down in 1942. Two years after, it was demolished to be use as tenement.
No, the Rose theatre and the Globe theatre are two different theatres. The Rose theatre opened before the Globe theatre in 1587, and the Globe theatre opened afterwards in 1599. The Rose theatre closed in 1605, whereas the Globe Theatre was burnt down in 1613, rebuilt in 1614 and then closed in 1642. Both theatres are now rebuilt and open to the public.
The Globe Theatre and the Blackfriars Theatre.
The Globe Theatre had wooden benches to sit on. You could get a cushion if you were prepared to pay. In Shakespeare's day, the plays went on for two or three hours without intermission, so I imagine your bum might get sore by the end.
Do you mean the "Globe Theater"? The theater where some of Shakespeare's plays were performed? It had two levels above ground level. The Golden Globes are an award for film and TV.
Apollo and Mercury
Two of them: the Blackfriars and the Globe.
He owned a share in two theatres: The Globe and The Blackfriars. His share was usually one-eighth.
Yes he was a part-owner of two theatres, the Globe and the Blackfriars.
During Shakespeare's lifetime, his plays were performed at at least six public theatres in London: The Rose in 1592-93, The Theatre in 1594-6, The Curtain in 1596-1599, The first Globe in 1599-1613, the second Globe in 1613-1616, and the Blackfriars in 1608-1616, as well as being performed on makeshift stages in country venues, in people's houses, in public halls, at court, and even on board ship. After Shakespeare's death in 1616 his plays continued to be played at the second Globe and the Blackfriars (as well as the makeshift venues) to 1642, when all theatre was banned. After the Restoration, Shakespeare's plays were performed at the Drury Lane and Covent Garden theatres, and later, at just about all of the theatres in the world.