The audience was rude and dispolite and threw chickening wings at her i know it is very sad for more info go to www.http/ allaboutelizabethanaudience.org now go there now!
It depends. If the it is plural then it goes at the end like : audiences' If it is singular it goes like this: audience's
What does it take to become a great writer?
The plural possessive form is audiences'.
The plural form for the noun audience is audiences; the plural possessive form is audiences'.Example: The audiences' responses at all of the showings have been positive.
During Elizabethan times there were diseases going through large cities, like the black plague, dysentery and typhoid. They had various cures for these diseases (what they thought were cures) like tobacco, dried toad, bleed out of the victim and arsenic. Some people died from lack of hygiene. People never washed their hands, rarely ever took a bath and didn't brush their teeth or their hair. Living conditions during Elizabethan times were very poor which led to many diseases and death.
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mrs loko
Act one, scene three of Romeo and Juliet was exciting for Elizabethan audiences. The conflict of the fight scene made it very popular among audiences.
religion, human nature, and mythology
it was a thrust stage at the globe, there were audiences on three sides sometimes all around if the box above the stage was sat.
The best storyteller in Elizabethan times was Shakespeare.
It depends. If the it is plural then it goes at the end like : audiences' If it is singular it goes like this: audience's
We do not know how Elizabethan audiences reacted to specific lines in plays. Nobody recorded that kind of information.
Electricity (lights, sound, special effects), females playing female roles, elaborate sets and costumes, comfortable seats.
Elizabethan audiences enjoyed the plays they watched for pretty much the same reasons as people do today, which is why Elizabethan plays keep getting produced. They were probably quicker to understand what they heard than we are, and were better listeners (modern people expect a story to be shown to them, not told to them). Elizabethans particularly enjoyed wordplay that used puns and alliteration: that is why Shakespeare's Love's Labour's Lost was much more popular then than now. A lot of the wordplay in Much Ado is still accessible to modern audiences.
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