there was flags up with colour codes.
these would show wether it was comedy,history,tradigy or other.
hope i helped :')
Colored flags were flown that denoted the performance status.
It didnt have a roof if there was bad weather if would spoil the performance
The theater manager would fly a flag over its roof the day of a performance.
if the concert was on the flag on the top would fly and it would aprise you .
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.
Colored flags were flown that denoted the performance status.
It didnt have a roof if there was bad weather if would spoil the performance
The theater manager would fly a flag over its roof the day of a performance.
You could tell because peasants would post sheets with info and the people in the play would tell everyone
if the concert was on the flag on the top would fly and it would aprise you .
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 only thing controversial about the Globe Theatre or about Shakespeare for that matter is that the Earl of Essex, prior to his attempted coup d'etat in 1601, commissioned a performance of Shakespeare's play Richard II to be performed at the Globe by the Lord Chamberlain's Men. Essex thought it would encourage people to support his coup. It didn't.
train or car
When people used to go and watch perfomances in the Globe, the wealthy, or as you would say "the posh people" would sit on the seats in the theatre.
Hence the name.... Globe theatre. Would it make sense if it was a rectangular prism?
The Globe Theater used flags as a way of communicating information about the plays of the day. If the flag was raised it indicated a performance was scheduled. If it wasn't raised, the people knew the performance had been canceled. Colored flags also indicated the type of play that would be performed.
The Globe Theatre is the theatre most often associated with Shakespeare. However, it was not his theatre in the sense that your car is your car. He did not own it although he did have a financial interest in it. It was not the only theatre he had a financial interest in. It is far from the only theatre he acted in; he acted in many others. It was not the only place Shakespeare's plays were seen (although they were performed there) and they played lots of plays by people other than Shakespeare there. Finally, none of his contemporaries would ever have thought of the Globe as "Shakespeare's theatre"; almost certainly it would be "the Burbages' theatre."