Posters (playbills) were distributed and displayed to advertise performances.
It's hard to say who exactally visited them because lots of different people went to them, but we do know for a fact that Queen Elizabeth I was one of the people that would have gone to see them.
Which Globe Theatre are you talking about? We know it was performed at least once at the first Globe in London, in April of 1610.
i dont know you tell me!
The outside of the original Globe Theatre looked very much like Sam Wanamaker's modern Globe theatre in Southwark. We don't know what the original Globe looked like inside. (The inside of the modern Globe is copied from some drawings we have of the inside of the Star - a slightly less famous Jacobean theatre).
We don't know much about the internal design of the Globe Theatre: the internal arrangement of the modern Globe in London is copied from an illustration of the Swan theatre (roughly contemporary with the Globe). Since we know very little about the internal design of any Sixteenth Century London theatre (except the Swan) - your question is really unanswerable.
I don't know. Maybe, Twelfth Night and Romeo and Juliet?
the globe light will be on
i not know
It's hard to say who exactally visited them because lots of different people went to them, but we do know for a fact that Queen Elizabeth I was one of the people that would have gone to see them.
Which Globe Theatre are you talking about? We know it was performed at least once at the first Globe in London, in April of 1610.
i dont know you tell me!
The outside of the original Globe Theatre looked very much like Sam Wanamaker's modern Globe theatre in Southwark. We don't know what the original Globe looked like inside. (The inside of the modern Globe is copied from some drawings we have of the inside of the Star - a slightly less famous Jacobean theatre).
We don't know much about the internal design of the Globe Theatre: the internal arrangement of the modern Globe in London is copied from an illustration of the Swan theatre (roughly contemporary with the Globe). Since we know very little about the internal design of any Sixteenth Century London theatre (except the Swan) - your question is really unanswerable.
DONT KNOW HAHA
beacuse you would the flag flying
The Globe
the flag went up