The people who had not much money could pay as little as 1p to enter and 1p for a standing view, these people got called names such as: groundlings, penny stinkers,ground blinks etc. This Area is called: pit, standing area.
for as little as 2p you could get a seat in the 1st their although this area got you a hard backless seat for an extra 1p you could get a cushion.
For 3p you could get the same but in a 2nd their.
1 penny 1 penny
it wasn't there silly!
1p, but that was quite alot in those days.
alot
The atmosphere inside the Globe Theatre was very like the atmosphere outside the theatre on account of it had no roof. The main difference that the 3000 people inside it made were that it was somewhat hotter and much smellier (these people often had not bathed for months)
1 penny 1 penny
1 penny 1 penny
it wasn't there silly!
1p, but that was quite alot in those days.
alot
The atmosphere inside the Globe Theatre was very like the atmosphere outside the theatre on account of it had no roof. The main difference that the 3000 people inside it made were that it was somewhat hotter and much smellier (these people often had not bathed for months)
The new Shakespeare's Globe Theatre in London, which is about twenty years old, was designed to look as much as possible like the Globe Theatre built in 1599. If you look for images of that theatre you will see what it looked like.
The Globe Theatre, when it was built in 1599, was the largest theatre in London, with a capacity of 3000 people. It was eclipsed by the slightly larger Fortune Theatre shortly thereafter. However, not all of those 3000 people were seated; by far the majority stood for the performance. The modern reconstruction of the Globe (Shakespeare's Globe Theatre) has a capacity of about 1100 people, of which 400 are seated. The number of seated people in the original Globe was slightly higher as seats were sold on the balcony and on the stage itself if you had the pull and the money. The standees were expected to pack themselves in much more tightly than people would be comfortable with nowadays.
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).
$1,000,000. Each
the globe theater cost £1093 to build in 1599....
Well, of course, as much as we like to think of living theatre, theatres are not alive. The history of the Globe Theatre in London is as follows: First Globe: built in 1599, burned down 1613 Second Globe: built in 1614, torn down 1644 Third Globe: built in 1997