Shakespeare'sGlobe Theater
The Globe, which was originally known as The Theatre.
Shakespeare contributed to the financing of the Globe Theatre but the backers got other people to build it. Its design resembled earlier theatres such as The Theatre, The Rose and The Curtain.
If by "Shakespeare's Theatre" you mean the Globe Theatre (which was only partly owned by Shakespeare, and which was not built by him), the lumber was salvaged from the earlier playhouse The Theatre. This was an ok name for it, since these buildings were called "playhouses" at the time, not "theatres".
It took 10 years to build in 1997,however is only a replica called Shakespeare's globe theater
The timbering material from The Theater was dismantled, put on boats and carried across the Thames River. That same lumber was used (with necessary additions) to build The Globe Theater, which was famous for housing Shakespeare's plays.
Shakespeare did not build the Globe Theatre and did not get the wood. The carpenter's name was Peter Street, and the timber came from the old Theatre Playhouse, the property of Richard and Cuthbert Burbage. Although the Burbages brought the wood and most of the money, Shakespeare kicked in some cash to buy plaster, nails, paint, etc.
Let's get it clear, Shakespeare was not the builder or the main push behind the building of the Globe Theatre. He only invested money in it. The timbers came from The Theatre, a playhouse north of London owned by the Burbage family. There was a dispute with the landlord so the Burbages sent their carpenter to tear it down and move the timbers south of the river. The landlord was livid, and sued the builder and the Burbages but lost.
Global theater (Globe Theatre) is located in London, the first global theater by William Shakespeare's place in 1599 within the minister troupe build, 29 June 1613 were destroyed in a fire. In 1614, global theater reconstruction, and closed in 1642. In 1997, a modern fake global theater built, named "Shakespeare global theater" or "new global theater", from the Park Street (Park Street) site of about 205 metres away.
1. There is not and never has been a theatre called the Elizabeth Theatre. (There are Queen Elizabeth Theatres in Toronto and Vancouver, but no Elizabeth Theatre), so obviously nobody built a theatre by that name. 2. William Shakespeare did not build theatres. He was not a builder. He was not a contractor. Nor did he hire them. Shakespeare invested in theatres, he did not build them.
No, but the original Globe Theatre was the first to be built by an acting company. See the related question link below.
Timber.