Assuming that you are talking about the Globe Theatre that was built in 1599 and not one of the many subsequent theatres of that name, many scholars think that Julius Caesar may have been the first play performed there. We know that it was one of the first because of the record of a traveller who saw it there in 1599. It could, of course, have been any other play that had already been written, such as A Midsummer Night's Dream or Romeo and Juliet, both of which had been written five years earlier, but it is unlikely.
Most people think it was Julius Caesar.
You can find out by attending a play at Shakespeare's Globe in London or in another replica of an Elizabethan theatre.
Chamberlains men were the actors, so they would play the nomal plays Shakespeare suggested. Shakespeare also sort of ushered in the Globe theatre with his writings.
Shakespeare's Henry the 8th
The last play performed at the Globe theater was in 1613. It was a play by Shakespeare called Henry Vlll.
Julius Caesar
Most people think it was Julius Caesar.
The Globe theatre
You can find out by attending a play at Shakespeare's Globe in London or in another replica of an Elizabethan theatre.
Chamberlains men were the actors, so they would play the nomal plays Shakespeare suggested. Shakespeare also sort of ushered in the Globe theatre with his writings.
Shakespeare's Henry the 8th
The last play performed at the Globe theater was in 1613. It was a play by Shakespeare called Henry Vlll.
When you say "Shakespeare's Globe" you mean the reconstruction of the first Globe Theatre which opened in London in 1997. The most popular play at Shakespeare's Globe is Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors, which has been produced 5 times, followed by Romeo and Juliet and A Midsummer Night's Dream (4 times each) and Howard Brenton's Anne Boleyn (3 times)
Chamberlains men were the actors, so they would play the nomal plays Shakespeare suggested. Shakespeare also sort of ushered in the Globe Theatre with his writings.
"Shakespeare's Globe Theatre" is the name of the modern reconstruction of the Globe in Southwark, London, not far from the location of the original Globe. The repertoire of play performed there includes all of Shakespeare's plays, of course, as well as plays by Marlowe and other Elizabethan playwrights. You can check out what's going on there at the related link.
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Well, the owners of the Globe, of course.