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the modern theatres are proberly safer then the globe theatre.
it look cooler and bigger
The original Globe Theatre had no electricity laid on. All the lighting was natural sunlight. All modern theatres have provision for a huge number of electric lights. Also, there were no bathrooms for the audience at the original Globe. Thankfully that has been changed in all modern theatres.
The new design is more up to date with today's technology, the surroundings are more eye catchy. But the new theatre has still kept the same themes as the original theatre and always will do.
We don't know much about the internal design of the Globe Theatre: the internal arrangement of the modern Globe in London is copied from an illustration of the Swan theatre (roughly contemporary with the Globe). Since we know very little about the internal design of any Sixteenth Century London theatre (except the Swan) - your question is really unanswerable.
the modern theatres are proberly safer then the globe theatre.
In a modern theatre the audience sits opposite to the stage. In the globe the audience sits (partly) around the stage, in the manner of the ancient Greek theatres.
it look cooler and bigger
The original Globe Theatre had no electricity laid on. All the lighting was natural sunlight. All modern theatres have provision for a huge number of electric lights. Also, there were no bathrooms for the audience at the original Globe. Thankfully that has been changed in all modern theatres.
The new design is more up to date with today's technology, the surroundings are more eye catchy. But the new theatre has still kept the same themes as the original theatre and always will do.
The new design is more up to date with today's technology, the surroundings are more eye catchy. But the new theatre has still kept the same themes as the original theatre and always will do.
We don't know much about the internal design of the Globe Theatre: the internal arrangement of the modern Globe in London is copied from an illustration of the Swan theatre (roughly contemporary with the Globe). Since we know very little about the internal design of any Sixteenth Century London theatre (except the Swan) - your question is really unanswerable.
The Modern Globe theatre is based on the original design from Shakespears' time - so forget the heating. The audience is mainly standing, but there is some seating in the galleries.
The new design is more up to date with today's technology, the surroundings are more eye catchy. But the new theatre has still kept the same themes as the original theatre and always will do.
No. However the modern replica Globe Theatre is called Shakespeare's Globe Theatre.
The second Globe theatre was built in June 1614 and closed in 1642,, There was also a modern version of the Globe theatre named "Shakespeare's Globe". =]
We know very little of the design of the Globe theatre, in fact no-one knows what the inside looked like at all. The inside of the modern Globe is copied from an illustration we have of the Swan theatre's stage and audience pit - this being the nearest thing we have to a contemporary illustration of an Elizabethan theatre.