an Elizabethan actor has to have a strong voice
This would be Richard Burbage, the second greatest actor of Shakespeare's day.
Elizabethan Theatres were open roofed play houses built in the Renaissance
The style of performance in the Elizabethan theatre was often overdramatic and over-exaggerated to carry across their point to their live audience. The audience loved the emphasis on certain phrases/dialogues because it was easy to understand and it was clear what the actor was expressing. The audience was known to go on about certain subjects that they felt passionate about and their exaggerated style really captured their attention.
Nothing. The Globe theatre was one of the Elizabethan theatres. Think of "Elizabethan" as a time or type, not an actual theatre with that name.
Shakespeare wrote lots of plays not one of which was named "elizabethan age". The time he lived in was called the Elizabethan Age after Queen Elizabeth 1st.
Robert Browne - Elizabethan actor - died in 1603.
The same as a modern-day actor needs - Good memory, confidence and acting ability.
Playwright, poet, Elizabethan, actor, theatre.
This would be Richard Burbage, the second greatest actor of Shakespeare's day.
Cost of printing/time of writing it up.
Sennet Daily Telegraph GK 5th July 20 down
The Young Elizabethan was created in 1948.
Elizabethan Express was created in 1954.
Elizabethan clothing is clothing during the Elizabethan age. In other words, this is the age of Shakespeare and the bubonic plague.
Pre-Elizabethan was the time Queen Elizabeth I lived. It was also called the Elizabethan time.
The actors would fill a pigs bladder with blood and when the other actor stabbed them with a spear, the bladder would burst and the blood would soak their clothes and pour onto the floor, giving the effect that they were bleeding. +++ Elizabethan theatres were actually pretty good at special effects.
The red-headed character in the novel "Cue for Treason" is Peter Brownrigg, the protagonist. He is a young actor who becomes entangled in espionage during the Elizabethan era in England.