It is not exactly known, although, as a member of the theatrical company housed at the Globe Theater, he must have been in many of the plays written around that time. There is a record of him performing in Ben Jonson's Every Man In His Humour and Sejanus.
According to studies, the Elizabethan repertory companies performed six times a week, Monday through Saturday, with performances starting around 2:00 P.M. Being repertory companies, it would be rare to perform the same play twice in the same week. A study of the Rose Playhouse in 1695 shows 36 performances of 17 plays in a six week period from August 25th to October 4th. Of the 17 plays in the rotation, four were new. If each play was performed a more or less equal number of times, that would come to a little more than two performances per play, but the plays were not performed an equal number of times. Some were played only once; some three or more times in the six week period.
Intervals are quite boring! Don't blame them if they didn't have them in Shakespearean times but I'm not sure if they did. My friend said they did though!
All of them. London was the centre of the English theatrical scene and the location of all the major playhouses. The theatrical company to which Shakespeare belonged and for whom he wrote all his plays was permanently established at a London theatre (it was a different theatre at different times) and that is where the plays would have seen their premiere.
At that time all the female parts were played by boys. (Although performances in the large outdoor theatres like the Globe used sunlight to light up the stage and so were held in the afternoon, performances in indoor theatres used artificial light and so could be and were held at night.)
Yes, Shakespeare's company were asked to perform at the courts of both Elizabeth I and James I. In particular, James asked them to perform many times to celebrate the marriage of his daughter in 1612. Many Shakespeare plays including Othello and Measure for Measure were performed.
he got famous by writing poems and plays in the olden times!
olden
Jim Jarvis was a real boy in the olden times and he was 10
olden times gadgets still being used in the present times
A theatre. Plays have been primarily performed in theatres since the creation of the genre in Greek times.
by lalu
In olden times, measurement was done using the body parts.
The Wakefield Mystery Plays were performed in a city called Wakefield in England. They were played in medieval times, until 1576.
Japanese plays in the olden times, such as Noh and Kabuki, reflected social class differences by depicting characters from various societal ranks. Noh plays focused on aristocratic themes and characters, while Kabuki portrayed common people and themes. Additionally, the actors' costumes, makeup, and movements were specific to each social class, further emphasizing the distinctions.
Plays in Elizabethan times were sometimes performed in innyards. Is that what you are asking about?
old looking clothes because it was the old times =p
vulgarity