Nice big colorful spot lights. Actresses. Comfortable seating in the audience. Teenagers did not screw around there. No roof. No weather refunds. No parking lots. No popcorn. No Soda. No Twizzlers. No washrooms.
Lot's of Shakespear's plays where played It was built in the year of 1598 and the location was the London's Bank side district. It was very big and wide.
All sorts of monarchs went to see shakespeares plays including Elizabeth the first and king Edward the firstMostly men and nobles. Quick fun fact: Men were only allowed to be in Shakespeare's plays back in his day.
Shakespeare's Globe is a theatre in London opened in 1997, intended to be a working replica of the Globe Playhouse built in 1599 and destroyed by fire in 1613. The inspiration for the project came from American actor Sam Wanamaker, who was astonished, when he arrived in London, that there was no memorial to the most famous theatre of Shakespeare's day. The purpose of having a replica is to commemorate the earlier theatre, and at the same time allowing people to experience how plays were performed using Elizabethan staging.
Shakespeare did not have a theatre in Stratford. There's one there now, The Royal Shakespeare Theatre where the Royal Shakespeare Company plays, but there wasn't one in Shakespeare's day.
The Queen often visited the theatre and only those who paid money to get in.
The opening day was March 36, 1610. And the play preformed was Kinky Girls Next Door.
Lot's of Shakespear's plays where played It was built in the year of 1598 and the location was the London's Bank side district. It was very big and wide.
All sorts of monarchs went to see shakespeares plays including Elizabeth the first and king Edward the firstMostly men and nobles. Quick fun fact: Men were only allowed to be in Shakespeare's plays back in his day.
Shakespeare's Globe is a theatre in London opened in 1997, intended to be a working replica of the Globe Playhouse built in 1599 and destroyed by fire in 1613. The inspiration for the project came from American actor Sam Wanamaker, who was astonished, when he arrived in London, that there was no memorial to the most famous theatre of Shakespeare's day. The purpose of having a replica is to commemorate the earlier theatre, and at the same time allowing people to experience how plays were performed using Elizabethan staging.
A black flag flying over the Globe theatre represented that a trajedy play would occur that day. A white flag means a comedy and a red flag means a history.
Shakespeare did not have a theatre in Stratford. There's one there now, The Royal Shakespeare Theatre where the Royal Shakespeare Company plays, but there wasn't one in Shakespeare's day.
when there was enave sun light
The Queen often visited the theatre and only those who paid money to get in.
Open air public theatres existed in Shakespeares day. They were built of wood, and were circular in shape. They had about three tiers of covered seating, and an open yard in the middle for the 'lower class' to stand and watch the play. They were called groundlings because they stood on the ground, and were only charged a penny to do so. The stage protruded from one side of the circle and into the yard. 'Upper class' theatre visitors could even pay to sit at the side stage to watch the play. There were two main theatres in London during Shakespeare's time, called The Rose and The Globe. Shakespeare predominantly played in The Globe. For more information, I would search 'Shakespeare's Globe'. A reproduction has been built in London which is meant to be based on the designs for the original Globe Theatre. The original burnt down in the Great fire of London in 1666.
The Globe Theatre was closed on Thursdays primarily to accommodate the weekly market that took place in London on that day. This market attracted large crowds, making it impractical for the theatre to operate simultaneously. Additionally, it was common for theaters to have a day off during the week for maintenance and to give actors a rest.
1597 . Henry V
At The Globe William Shakespeare's audience were very mixed. Standing places at The Globe cost 1d (one penny) and with a working man earning anything between 2d and 4d a day this meant that even working people could go to the theatre occasionally. At The Globe ordinary working people stood in front of the stage, while rich merchants or guildsmen (professionals: doctors, lawyers, jewellers &c) occupied the seats and the boxes. Towards the end of Shakespeare's career the Kings Men opened a second theatre - Blackfriars - which was indoors, and where the cheapest seats were 6d. This was too expensive for a working man, so the theatre started to become more exclusive once the Blackfriars theatre was open.