Very smelly. People did not often take baths back then and the plays were three hours long, with no intermissions and no bathrooms.
Shakespeare creates a unique atmosphere for each one of his plays.
very frilly and/or poofy dresses
the queen loved shakespeares plays alot and many people did and still do
It was pretty bare and unencumbered by scenery. Modern productions of the plays tend to look the same way.
All of the plays called histories are about the Kings of England and the political events of their reign, although some of the kings, like Henry IV and Henry IV, are not major characters in the plays that bear their names.
Your best bet would be Hamlet, which reads like a string of famous quotations, Julius Caesar also has a lot.
Because they are darn good plays, that's why. They are extremely entertaining, even if what you really want to see are swordfights and people having their hands cut off.
It depends what you think is distasteful. Did Shakespeare make dirty jokes? Absolutely. Some plays, like Romeo and Juliet, Measure for Measure, and Troilus and Cressida, have more than others.
Lot's of Shakespear's plays where played It was built in the year of 1598 and the location was the London's Bank side district. It was very big and wide.
They didn't. Plays back then were normally preformed in a circular room so the sounds would bounce off the wall and be more loud. But if you're talking about like crash sounds etc. well they didn't have it
its just full of nothing
Some famous lines from Shakespeare's plays that are still commonly used today include "To be, or not to be: that is the question" from Hamlet, "All the world's a stage" from As You Like It, and "To thine own self be true" from Hamlet.