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10 Millbank Street Dalrymple Ayrshire KA6 6FE
They didn't move the Globe Theatre. What you are thinking of, probably, is when Richard and Cuthbert Burbage found themselves to be the owner of a theatre called The Theatre which they couldn't use because the landlord wouldn't allow anyone on the land. When their landlord was away, they got their carpenter, Peter Street, to take the Theatre down. They saved some of the lumber from the old theatre and used it to build a new theatre in a new part of town. This new theatre was called the Globe Theatre and it opened in 1599. It didn't move anywhere.
it toke 6 month's to construct the globe theatre
Originally William Shakespeare's theater company was called The Lord Chamberlain's Men. In which Shakespeare not only wrote the plays for but was also seen to be an active actor. This company was founded in 1594 under the reign of Queen Elizabeth I by the patronage of Henry Carey known as the Lord Chamberlain (hence the original name). Chamberlain was in charge of all the court entertainments. His death in 1596 resulted in his son, George Carey, to take his place as the company's patron. George was also known as the 2nd Baron Hunsdon which led to Shakespeare's company to be renamed to Lord Hunsdon's Men until he became the new Lord Chamberlain in 1597. When Queen Elizabeth I passed away, King James took the throne and became the new patron. So, in 1603 the company's name was then changed to the King's Men.
multiply 37 by 48. Use a calculator.
10 Millbank Street Dalrymple Ayrshire KA6 6FE
At a receiving theatre you will only see touring productions. At a producing theatre the shows are put on by the company resident in that theatre - the company is employed by the theatre, rehearsals take place there etc. Most major local theatres will be receiving theatres. London has more producing theatres such as the National theatre.
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I take it you are asking whether all of the theatre companies in Shakespeare's day had a theatre which they could call their home base. Any theatre company could hire a theatre for one performance, but it was useful to be the only company using a particular theatre. For one thing, you could store your costumes and scripts there. Only three companies had this advantage: The Lord Chamberlain's (First, the Theatre, then the Curtain, then the Globe, then the Globe and Blackfriars), The Lord Admiral's (The Rose and later the Fortune), and Worcester's (The Red Bull). Other companies had to play either in a rented theatre, private homes, public halls or inns, as became convenient.
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You have a few options. First you can rent a dumpster and once it is filled, the company will come and take it away. The second option is to call a junk removal company. They will pick it up and take it away for you.
They didn't move the Globe Theatre. What you are thinking of, probably, is when Richard and Cuthbert Burbage found themselves to be the owner of a theatre called The Theatre which they couldn't use because the landlord wouldn't allow anyone on the land. When their landlord was away, they got their carpenter, Peter Street, to take the Theatre down. They saved some of the lumber from the old theatre and used it to build a new theatre in a new part of town. This new theatre was called the Globe Theatre and it opened in 1599. It didn't move anywhere.
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They did it because Disney decided to buy out the company and gave them extra money to take it away. I'm not sure what channels or cable company's but some cable company's still have jetix
Your question is not clear. If you mean by "Shakespeare's theatre" the theatrical profession in Shakespeare's day, it was legal provided that the theatrical company was under the patronage of a member of the nobility or royalty. Without such a patron, a company of actors were "masterless men" and might be arrested as vagabonds and vagrants. If you mean by "Shakespeare's theatre" a theatre Shakespeare played in, there were a lot of them, with different legal arrangements. The Theatre was owned by James Burbage, but the land under it wasn't. When the landlord decided he didn't like plays he locked people out of the theatre. The Rose was owned by Philip Henslowe, and he also owned the land it was on. Henslowe appears to have also owned Newington Butts Theatre. Burbage may have owned The Curtain playhouse. Shakespeare acted in all these playhouses. When James Burbage died his sons Richard and Cuthbert inherited the Theatre but couldn't do anything with it because of the lockout. When the landlord was away, they hired a carpenter, Peter Street, to take down The Theatre and move the timbers to a new location south of the River Thames. In order to finance the building of a new theatre they took on four investors, each of whom was to own a one-eighth share in the new playhouse, to be called the Globe, which was opened in 1599. The Globe was therefore run by a partnership, in which there were major partners (the Burbages) and minor partners (one of whom was Shakespeare). The landlord of the property where the Theatre had been built was unsurprisingly furious and sued the Burbages, but the court held that the theatre building belonged to the Burbages and not to their landlord, and that they were within their rights to take it away. Legally speaking, the court held that the theatre was a chattel, not a fixture.
it toke 6 month's to construct the globe theatre