It would cost anything around 90 - 80 cents.
From the standing area in front of the stage.
In Shakespeare's time - the groundlings
The front of the stage is the portion closest to the audience.
Maybe...
No, it is not.
Most of them would be standing round the stage. There were galleries for a smaller number.
From the standing area in front of the stage.
From the standing area in front of the stage.
Some of the audience, who had purchased standing-room tickets. There were generally quite a lot of these and there was a large open space surrounding the stage to accommodate them. They were sometimes called "groundlings" because they had to stand on the ground.
Because the front part of the stage, the proscenium, would 'thrust' out from the stage proper and into the audience space.
In Shakespeare's time - the groundlings
amphitheatre orchestra
yes ,obviously shakespeare perform on stag as an artist.
The front of the stage is known as the apron.
The front of the stage is the portion closest to the audience.
The "upper stage" was a balcony which ran along the upper part of the front of the tiring house. This space was used whenever the play demanded that some actors be higher than others. This area was Juliet's balcony, the walls of Harfleur in Henry V, the masts of the ship in The Tempest and so on. Clearly, then, one group of people who would occupy this space, at least sometimes, were actors. But at the same time very wealthy people got seats on the stage, and this could mean either the lower or the upper stage. So, there would have been audience members in this space as well.
Shakespeare does frequently use imagery related to the stage: "All the world's a stage", "a poor player who struts and frets his hour upon the stage", "this poor stage of fools", and so on.