Disgusting as it may seem, they used real blood in a bladder disguised under the costume. When the actor was stabbed, real blood poured out onto the stage. Since London was full of slaughterhouses ("shambles" was their word for them), these ingredients were easy to come by. The people responsible for cleaning the stage and costumes couldn't have been happy about it though.
actors used bladders of pigs blood which they burst when they had been stabbed
they just stabbed them they did not act anything.
farts
The cast of Stabbed - 2012 includes: Leila Bafageeh as Leila Burke Steve Dumais as Nick Joshua Patrick Dudley as Ghostface
Sunshine Corazon.... here real name is Charice.
Yes. The Elizabethans (those of Shakespeare's time) had much less time for rehearsals, however; they usually only had a day or so to practice before they performed.
The actors would fill a pigs bladder with blood and when the other actor stabbed them with a spear, the bladder would burst and the blood would soak their clothes and pour onto the floor, giving the effect that they were bleeding. +++ Elizabethan theatres were actually pretty good at special effects.
The cast of Stabber - 2011 includes: Tom Kauffman as Stabbed Guy Angela Trimbur as Alexis Brandon Vaughn as Stabber
The cast of Side Effects - 2004 includes: Ruth Gerson
The cast of Effects of Gravity - 2010 includes: Payne Fulcher as Payne
The cast of Trace Effects - 2012 includes: Mike Goral as Louis