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1979-12-31
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2KB
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48 lines
4
12
The flag showed that the theatre was open. Because the theatre
had no roof over the central area bad weather meant that the
show had to be cancelled. Even the greatness of Shakespeare was
no match for the English weather!
Around the outer rim of the theatre were three rows of gallery
seating. These were more expensive than places in the pit. Some
of these galleries were cut off into private rooms like a box
in a modern theatre. It must have been rather frightening for
an inexperienced actor to have the audience piled up three deep
all around him. For old hands like Shakespeare himself it was
no doubt an incentive to produce a stirring performance.
13
The hut was used to store stage equipment. It could also be
used for special effects. For instance actors could seem to fly
if they were raised up by the lifting gear stored here.
As you can see the stage jutted out into the audience. This
type of theatre was very intimate as the audience was very
close to the actors. Behind the stage was another small acting
area and the balcony could also be used. Very little was done
in the way of stage decoration and the audience relied on the
words of the play to fill in details of the setting etc.
The doors led to another small acting area. It could have
been used for small interior scenes.
11
In Shakespeare's day plays were performed during the day. These
windows would have let in light but of course most light would
have poured in through the open roof in the centre of the
theatre.
Ordinary spectators were located here in the pit. There was no
seating and no shelter if the weather was poor. Admission to
the pit was one penny a time. These were mainly lower class
people and they were certainly often noisy and boisterous.
Some of the cruder humour and coarse jokes in the plays would
have been written with this section of the audience in mind.
4
This cut-away picture shows some of the details of the way the
Globe was constructed. It was of course built entirely of wood
and would have been extremely inflammable. In fact the theatre
burnt down in 1613 but it was later rebuilt on the same spot.