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It depends on how you define "old"! If you define it as "the oldest auditorium" (the auditorium being the bit you sit in to watch shows), Bristol Old Vic (officially called the Theatre Royal, Bristol) lays claim to being the oldest theatre in Britain (built 1766), followed by the Theatre Royal Margate (1787), then the Theatre Royal Bury St Edmonds (1819). If you define "old" as "the oldest theatre site", then there's some competition depending on how you define it again, but there has been a theatre continuously on the site of the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, since 1663. The current building is the fourth theatre on the site, dating from 1812. However, there are sites with theatres on now that had theatres (or some other form of entertainment venue) on them before 1663 which are older, but these haven't been continuously in use. And we can't forget The Globe (even though it is 300 yards or so from the original site of Shakespeare's Globe), which is a replica of Shakespeare's Bankside theatre.
The Lyceum Theatre 149 West 45th Street, New York, NY 10036 Built in 1903, its soaring columns and penthouse windows are magnificent
No it wasn't. The ancient Greeks and Romans built very effective outdoor theatres many of which are in use today, 1500 years and more before the Globe was built in 1599. But the Globe was not even the oldest theatre in Britain which was intended as a theatre not just an innyard. The Theatre in Shoreditch, built 1576, was the first. Newington Butts, The Curtain, The Rose, The Swan and the Blackfriars all were built before The Globe.
The Theatre of Dionysus located in Athens Greece is an ancient open-air theatre that dates back to the 6th century BCE. It was designed to provide a venue for the performances of the Great Dionysia a series of ancient Greek tragedies and comedies. The Theatre of Dionysus is widely considered to be the birthplace of ancient Greek theatre and it is a major tourist attraction today. Here are some facts about the Theatre of Dionysus: It is located at the southern foot of the Acropolis of Athens. It was built around 530 BCE and is one of the oldest surviving theatres in the world. The theatre could hold up to 17000 people. It was used for the performances of the Great Dionysia a series of ancient Greek tragedies and comedies. It was the first theatre to feature a circular orchestra area and a raised stage. It was built in the shape of a semicircle with a seating capacity of 17000 people. The theatre was destroyed and rebuilt several times over the centuries. The modern version of the theatre was restored in the 1950s.Today the Theatre of Dionysus is a major tourist attraction in Athens with thousands of visitors coming to see it each year. It is an important part of ancient Greek culture and a reminder of the birth of theatre.
The country with the oldest musical tradition is India.
Japan's Yamato dynasty is the world's oldest continuous monarchy.
The Isle of Man, which has the oldest continuous parliament in the world.
san marino=oldest country on record maybe not the real oldest......but the oldest still with the same name most tradition go's to china
Aboriginal Australians are the oldest continuous culture on Earth.
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Japanese
yes it is
The Bates Family.
Yes
africa's oldest country is LIBERIA
St. Thomas Christans of Kerala state in India is the oldest community with continuous exitence to date.