Shakespeare was part owner of two theatres, The Globe Theatre and The Blackfriars. He called the Globe Theatre the Wooden "O" in his play Henry V because it was built almost circular with an open courtyard in the middle. The Blackfriars was an indoor theatre, designed very much like theatres today with a thrust stage and seating both on the floor and in galleries.
The Globe Theater.
Shakespeare did not own any theatres, at least not by himself. He owned shares in a couple of them, but that doesn't make him the owner, any more than owning shares in Apple makes me the owner of Apple.
The Globe Theater was an open theater that is commonly associated with Shakespeare, but it was not owned by him. It was first built in 1599.
Shakespeare was a part owner of the Globe Theatre which was an outdoor theatre. He was also a part owner of the Blackfriars, an indoor theatre.
Globe Theatre
The Globe theater.
Globe
The Globe Theater
Shakespeare's plays were attended by the super rich and the upper middle class. Lower classes attended the plays for a penny and were allowed to stand outside the grounds of the outdoor play. They were called groundlings.
Shakespeare's plays have regularly been played in London from about 1590 to the present day, with the exception of the years 1642 to 1660.
No
B
The Globe Theater
The Globe Theater, London.
the global theater
The Globe Theater, one of many.
The Bard
Shakespeare's plays were attended by the super rich and the upper middle class. Lower classes attended the plays for a penny and were allowed to stand outside the grounds of the outdoor play. They were called groundlings.
Shakespeare's plays have regularly been played in London from about 1590 to the present day, with the exception of the years 1642 to 1660.
The Theatre playhouse or The Curtain are the most likely places, but nobody knows for sure. Later, his plays were performed at the Globe in the Summer and Blackfriars in the Winter.
chips and beans
No
To Highlight multiple, short plays
To highlight multiple, short plays