in Elizabethan theater, an audience member who was usually standing in the cheap section. commoners paid one penny for a seat in Elizabethan theater, an audience member who was usually standing in the cheap section. commoners paid one penny for a seat
The groundlings were the people who paid for the cheapest tickets and watched the play standing up in a space in front of the stage. You can get really close to the actors if you're a groundling. Hamlet talks about actors who "split the ears of the groundlings" by speaking loudly.
Groundlings were members of the audience attending performances of Shakespeare's many plays. They were the poor people who sat on the floor, which is where they get their name "groundlings."
The play does not refer to groundlings as Hamlet does, but they were the people who paid for standing room tickets to the theatre.
They are the normal towns people or poor people who pay only 1 cent to stand and watch the play.
The groundlings were the people who bought the cheapest tickets to the theatre, which only entitled you to stand and watch the play.
Groundlings were the audience members who only paid a penny to stand in the open yard in front of and to the sides of the stage.
stupid people who are very poor
That is not nice calling people stupid cause they are poor its like if i said people who are stupid rich people its like you guys get money bout to mch and now you cant spend it because i pent it on something american people are stupid too
Groundlings.
They were called groundlings.
wardrobe musicians pit
Groundlings or the Penny Public.
Groundlings.
Groundlings.
They were called groundlings.
wardrobe musicians pit
Groundlings did not sit in the gallery at the Globe, as the cost of those seats was as much as half a crown. A penny to stand before the stage equaled a groundlings daily wage. However, for a penny more, they were led through another door of the theater where they could sit down for the performance.
They were called groundlings and are often associated with the Globe Theater, the place where most of Shakespeare's plays were preformed.
I believe the term you are looking for is "Promenaders" or "Groundlings" The the people who would stand in the gallery floor space in the Albert Hall (London) during 'Prom' performances are called "Promenaders" and the term for the audience standing in the 'Yard' area of Shakespeare's Globe Theater (London) was "Groundlings." They paid one penny to get in and stood on the floor.
Groundlings or the Penny Public.
Groundlings.
Groundlings did not sit in the gallery at the Globe, as the cost of those seats was as much as half a crown. A penny to stand before the stage equaled a groundlings daily wage. However, for a penny more, they were led through another door of the theater where they could sit down for the performance.
The pit was the name of the area around the stage where those audience members who could only afford standing room tickets ("the groundlings") would stand.
globe theater
Groundlings.