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Elizabethan Theatres were open roofed play houses built in the Renaissance
Act one, scene three of Romeo and Juliet was exciting for Elizabethan audiences. The conflict of the fight scene made it very popular among audiences.
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Elizabethan Theatres were open roofed play houses built in the Renaissance
Act one, scene three of Romeo and Juliet was exciting for Elizabethan audiences. The conflict of the fight scene made it very popular among audiences.
religion, human nature, and mythology
The Heavens
matériel
BOOED
Nothing. The Globe theatre was one of the Elizabethan theatres. Think of "Elizabethan" as a time or type, not an actual theatre with that name.
it was a thrust stage at the globe, there were audiences on three sides sometimes all around if the box above the stage was sat.
Amphitheaters - The Theatre, The Globe, The Rose, The Swan, Newlington Butts Theatre, The Curtain, The Fortune,The Boars Head, The Red Bull, The Bear's Garden, The Bull Ring and finally, The Hope. They are all the open-air theatres during the Elizabethan era.
Only one, the first Globe which was built in 1599. It existed in Elizabethan times for only four years, until Elizabeth died in 1603.
Not all Elizabethan Theatres were round, although the most famous ones were. These included the Theatre, Curtain, Rose, Globe, Swan and Hope. The reason for the round shape is the same as the reason it is used when building sports stadia--to have all of the audience the same distance from the action. In square theatres (like the Red Bull and Fortune) the seats in the corners would have had a poorer view.
Anti-theatricalists are people who spoke against theatre in Elizabethan times. They called theatres "Temples of Satan."