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.
athenian theater, medieval theater, Elizabethan theater, and panoramic theater the difference between the four is their architectural design only
No. The name of the theatre was The Globe.
The Tudor time theatre had electric lights and the modern time theatre has electric lights
Elizabethan theater involved several theater companies of actors and playwrights. In London the globe theater was in use and Shakespeare was performing his works. There were no female actresses during Elizabethan times, instead young teenage boys would play female roles.
The audience's role in any kind of theatre is to hear and see the play.
athenian theater, medieval theater, Elizabethan theater, and panoramic theater the difference between the four is their architectural design only
No. The name of the theatre was The Globe.
The shakespearian theatre "The Globe Theatre" is in Bankside,London SE1.It is an exact replica of the original Elizabethan open-air theatre where William Shakespear put on his plays.
The Tudor time theatre had electric lights and the modern time theatre has electric lights
The theater is a performing art form whose performances usually take place in a theater.
Elizabethan theater involved several theater companies of actors and playwrights. In London the globe theater was in use and Shakespeare was performing his works. There were no female actresses during Elizabethan times, instead young teenage boys would play female roles.
Yes. The Globe was and is William Shakespeare's theatre, although a replica of it had to be rebuilt later.
The audience's role in any kind of theatre is to hear and see the play.
Strictly speaking the Elizabethan Theatre was the theatre during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I of England 1558-1603. The Shakespearean Theatre was the theatre during the career of William Shakespeare, being 1590-1613 more or less. As you see, there was a lot of Elizabethan Theatre before Shakespeare got started and he also did a lot of work after her death, during the period of the Jacobean Theatre. The Elizabethan and Jacobean periods are sometimes called English Renaissance Theatre.
People in the theatre world tend to spell it "theatre" and those who are not spell it "theater." The basic difference as it was explained to me by one of my theatre professors in college is: Theatre is the art form and Theater is the building. Example- I am going to the Kodak Theater to see a theatre performance. Also, theatre is the (British) English spelling of the word theater.
A theatre is live and a movie has been recorded from a studio and put into video/DVD
Oh, but there is! The spelling "theater" (the "American" way) is synonymous with cinemas, where you'd see a film. The spelling "theatre" (the "British" way) is synonymous with playhouses featuring live acting.