Shakespeare loved playing with people's expectations, but not too much. Most everyone in the theatre already knew the story of Romeo and Juliet, and those that didn't got the short summary in the Prologue. In many ways Romeo and Juliet starts out like a comedy: the middle-class setting, the concern with love, and no real political issues, and it was unusual to turn a story which started out that way into a tragedy. But Romeo and Juliet was hardly the first love-driven tragedy in the Elizabethan theatre--the most consistently popular play of the period, The Spanish Tragedy starts off with the competition of two men for one woman.
The audience
No, his play more tragic and full with suspension.
By using the same dialect as the audience members By wearing costumes that reflected the clothing of the time
Shakespeares targeted audience was that of the rich to the dirt poor. He created the globe theatre in an effort to allow all people from all classes to watch his performances with varying cost and areas available within the theatre
Very sparsely. There were frequent scene changes and no wings to put fancy scenery. A chair, table, or bench might serve many purposes and could be put in the recess at the back of the stage. For the rest, the audience had to eke out the imperfections with their thoughts.
The audience
because there was hot action.
The audience was divided into those who were going to stand through the play and those who got to sit, depending on how much they paid to get in.
They may have had water, wine, ale, or rum; the same as the audience.
No, his play more tragic and full with suspension.
By using the same dialect as the audience members By wearing costumes that reflected the clothing of the time
The Workers.
Well, the main audience i think is to the American citizens and public because it is to persuade them to continue supporting the Revolutionary War :)
Because the front part of the stage, the proscenium, would 'thrust' out from the stage proper and into the audience space.
Shakespeares targeted audience was that of the rich to the dirt poor. He created the globe theatre in an effort to allow all people from all classes to watch his performances with varying cost and areas available within the theatre
Shakespeare's plays are typically structured in five acts. Each act represents a different phase of the storyline and serves to break up the narrative for the audience.
They are extremely versatile and used across multiple curriculums. They allow the audience/viewer to graphically see any connections, relations and proportions of the subject matter.