In an Elizabethan theatre you could sit our stand. There were no roofs on the theatres back then. There were very props sometimes they didn't have props. They were allowed to speak out to what they thought of the play sometimes they through things at the performers if they didn't like the play.
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The Leaders in london did not approve of theaters
They both appealed to an urban audience.
Why was it a challenge to hold the audience's attention in Elizabethan theaters? s it a challenge to hold the audience's attention in Elizabethan theaters? The visial and hearing wasnt to todays standards no microphones and different heights of people standing in front of one another.
they sat in seats, so they could watch the play. cmon, use your head ;)
William J. Lawrence has written: 'The Elizabethan playhouse' -- subject(s): Theater, Theaters, Stage history, Stage-setting and scenery, Music, History and criticism, History, Knowledge 'The physical conditions of the Elizabethan public playhouse' -- subject(s): History, Stage history, Theater, Theaters
It was a non-issue. In 1290 Edward I ordered all Jews to leave England, and they were not readmitted till 1657.
Elizabethan drama was written in the form of plays, primarily in blank verse and prose. Plays during this period were often structured as five-act dramatic works with distinct acts and scenes. theaters.
Actually in Elizabethan era theaters were called playhouses and I have found no reference to public playhouses so they were all private. Playhouses were also not considered the best places to go and were considered to be "dens of iniquity encouraged delight in idleness, excessive vanity, revelling, luxury, wantonness, lasciviousness, whoredoms" The long association between prostitution and the stage made the playhouse a very rowdy place.
The best storyteller in Elizabethan times was Shakespeare.
The development of Elizabethan drama was not influenced by the rise of modern technology, such as digital media or the internet, as these innovations came long after the Elizabethan era. Instead, it was shaped by factors like the Renaissance, the influence of classical literature, and the societal conditions of the time, including the patronage of the monarchy and the popularity of public theaters. Additionally, the religious and political context of the period played a significant role in shaping the themes and styles of the drama.