Anyone who could pay the admission fee could watch the play.
From trees.
yes they did but only if they where not busy
The mechanical devices used in the Globe Theatre were things like trap doors and things that made people flying or made them come up from under the ground like hanging wires.
The Theatre apart, transporting its timbers across the Thames to the Bankside where they were used to build the Globe.
When there was many people who wanted to come and see/hear the stories that wear usually told around campfires.
Late in the evening so they can come back from work and then go and watch a play.
the stage lighting would come from candles
the stage lighting would come from candles
Well, honey, in ancient Greek theatre, not everyone was allowed in. Women were forbidden from acting, so men had to play all the roles, even the female ones. And slaves and foreigners weren't allowed to attend the performances either. It was like an exclusive club, but with more togas and less bottle service.
Shirley Booth won the Golden Globe for Best Performance by an Actress in a Motion Picture - Drama in 1953 for Come Back, Little Sheba.
Trap doors, wires that made people "fly", platforms that made people come from "underground" etc.
It was sometimes called "Hell" since people could come up on stage from the understage through a trap door. That's where the witches in Macbeth made their exit and where Mephistopheles in Marlowe's Dr. Faustus entered from. Although of course Dr. Faustus was never played at the Globe Theatre of Shakespeare's day. It was played at The Rose and also at The Fortune, both of which had "Hells" of their own. The Globe Theatre was only one of many Elizabethan theatres which were all built on similar lines: the Theatre, the Curtain, the Rose, the Swan, the Fortune, and the Hope were all similar theatres at about the same time.