Want this question answered?
well, Rosa Parks was NOT rich, she was an African American and they didnt have lots of money also white people got more money in their jobs, also she was a woman who refused to give her sit to a white person but she was in the neutral sit, that means white and colored people could sit together which was good but not too good what they did to her, they made bus boycott.
They didn't have much but what they did have were beds made of straw/mats and most people had benches to sit on and use as tables.
Because one day a lady named Rosa Parks got on a bus and thought it was unfair to sit in the back. She thought Black people and White people SHOULD be able to sit anywhere and by anyone! So she sat in the front with the White people. She did get in trouble but now Black and White people could sit anywhere on a bus and sit next to anyone!
To demand that businesses let people sit where they want
because the people didn't serve them
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.
they sat in seats, so they could watch the play. cmon, use your head ;)
only if you sit with poor posture
They sat at the front when the rich people sat at the back... *@*
they sit around and be homeless all the time. POOR PEOPLE they dont sit around they are a very special part of our community and i feel there pain
The famous Shakespearian 'Globe' theatre in London; attendees, rather than sitting, stood and enjoyed often interactive theatre with its performers. The Globe was first built in 1599 by Shakespeare's Playing Company.
The Blair Witch Project (1999). The motion of the hand-held cameras that were used made many people throw up, so many movie theatres suggested that people with weak stomachs sit in the aisles and "try not to throw up on people." See the Related Link below for the imdb trivia page about the film.Something similar happened with the Exorcist (1973): many people got so scared that they fainted, and paramedics had to be called. As far as I know, though, no theatres ever recommended that suggestible patrons sit in the aisle seats.
Anyone basiclly. But, the poorer people had to sit in "penny seats" so they paid a penny and stood in front of the stage. The richer people sat in cushioned chairs surrounding them.
only rich people could afford to sit in the galleries (seats), lords would sit in the balconies behind the stage, poor people would stand in the yard and royalists would sit in the royal box.
Theatres like the Globe and the Rose had a thrust stage with a ring of covered seats, a set of ground floor seats and one or two balconies. These contained wooden benches on which audience members could sit. Some particularly favoured members of the audience were allowed to sit on the stage in chairs. The "groundlings", who filled the space inside the ring of seats, did not sit at all but stood through the performance.
We don't know which Greek architect decided to improve on the natural structure of a hillside to carve benches into the sides of the hills for people to sit. This was the first theatre. Later Greeks and Romans built many such theatres (called amphitheatres), many of which still stand. The first theatre in Elizabethan England was called the Red Lion and it was built in 1567. It was a commercial failure and was adapted to be farm buildings. The Theatre, built in 1576, was the first successful Elizabethan theatre. It was torn down because it was built on rented land and the landlord refused to renew the lease.
quite long because some people wanted there husbands and rich didnt want to sit with the poor