if you wanted to stand it cost a penny and it cost 6 pennce in the lords rooms!
blowjobs
Tuppence (two pennies). You could get in and watch the show for a penny, but you didn't get a seat. The seats cost tuppence.
The globe theater cost £1093 to build in 1599.
you probably couldn't afford it, but you would stand in the pit to watch the play, that's right no seats, but it cost less than wher
the globe theater cost £1093 to build in 1599....
blowjobs
Tuppence (two pennies). You could get in and watch the show for a penny, but you didn't get a seat. The seats cost tuppence.
Back in the elizabethan times the globe cost a penny which was roughly 10% of a workers wage. If you wanted to sit in one of the galleries it would cost you another penny for each story that went up.
The globe theater cost £1093 to build in 1599.
The globe theater cost £1093 to build in 1599.
you probably couldn't afford it, but you would stand in the pit to watch the play, that's right no seats, but it cost less than wher
the globe theater cost £1093 to build in 1599....
Two pennys to watch from the pit, three pennys to sit, six pennys to sit, and a crown to sit. So about fifteen quid.
The groundlings were people who paid for standing room tickets which entitled them to stand on the floor and watch the play. At the Globe these cost a penny.
It would cost a penny for the standing room at the Globe Theatre in Elizabethan time.
one penny
At the Globe Theatre in Shakespeare's day it cost at least tuppence to get a seat. You could get admission for a penny but not a seat. At the Blackfriars indoor theatre the prices were steeper.