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Shakespeare Globe
Age Sula
11a
William Shakespeare
He was born in Stratfordupon-Avon in 26th April 1564
and he died 23rd April 1616.
He was an English poet and
playwright.
He married Anne
Hathaway and had three
children Susanna, Hamnet
and Judith.
Between 1585 and 1592,
he becan a successful career
in London as an actor,
writer, part owner of a
playing company. (Lord
Chamberlain’s Men)
Creation
His early (1589-1613) plays
were mainly comedies and
histories.
He then wrote mainly
tragedies.
In his last phase, he wrote
tragicomedies, also known as
romances, and collaborated
with other playwrights.
Tragedies: “Hamlet”, “King
Lear”, “Macbeth”, “Romeo and
Juliet”, “Othello” and others.
Comedies: “All's Well That Ends
Well”, “As You Like It”, “The
Comedy of Errors “, ”Cymbeline”
and many more.
Histories: “Richard II”, “Henry
IV” and more.
Location
Address
Maiden Lane (now Park Street) Southwark
The Globe
History
The Globe was built in 1599
using timber from an earlier
theatre.
The Globe was owned by actors
who were also shareholders in
Lord Chamberlain’s Men.
On 28 December 1598 The
Theatre dismantled beam by
beam and transported it to
Street's waterfront warehouse
near Bridewell.
On 29 June 1613 the Globe Theatre
went up in flames.
It was rebuilt in the following year.
Like all the other theatres in
London, the Globe was closed down
by the Puritans in 1642.
A modern reconstruction of the
Globe, named “Shakespeare’s
Globe”, opened in 1997
Layout
The Globe's actual dimensions
are unknown.
The evidence suggests that it
was a three-storey, open-air
amphitheatre approximately
100 feet (30 m) in diameter that
could house up to
3,000 spectators.
The Globe is shown as round
on Wencesles Hollar’s sketch of
the building, hovever, in 198889 the Globe's foundation
suggested that it was a polygon
of 20 sides.
Fire
On 29 June 1613 the Globe
Theatre went up in flames during a
performance of Henry the Eighth.
A theatrical cannon, set off during
the performance, misfired, igniting
the wooden beams and thatching
According to one of the few
surviving documents of the event,
no one was hurt except a man whose
burning breeches were put out with
a bottle of ale.
It was rebuilt in the following
year.
Moving Globe
The Burbages originally had a 21-year lease of the site on which The
Theatre was built but owned the building outright.
However, the landlord, Giles Allen, claimed that the building had
become his with the expiry of the lease.
On 28 December 1598, while Allen was celebrating Christmas at his
country home, carpenter Peter Street, supported by the players and
their friends.
Dismantled The Theatre beam by beam and transported it to Street's
waterfront warehouse near Bridewell.
Facts About the
Globe
The Globe Theater had a 1500 plus audience capacity. Up to 3000
people would flock to the theatre and its grounds.
There was no heating in the Globe theatre. Plays were performed in the
summer months and transferred to the indoor playhouses during the
winter.
The Globe was built in a similar style to the Coliseum, but on a smaller
scale - other Elizabethan Theatres followed this style of architecture they were called amphitheatres.
Elizabethan theatres were also used for bear baiting, gambling and for
immoral purposes.
Elizabethan theatres attracted huge crowds - up to 3000 people.
Color coding was used to advertise the
type of play to be performed - a black flag
meant a tragedy , white a comedy and red a
history.
A trumpet was sounded to announce to
people that the play was about to begin at
the Globe Theatre in order for people to
take their final places.
During the height of the summer the
groundlings were also referred to as '
stinkards ' for obvious reasons.
All theaters located in the City were forced
to move to the South side of the River
Thames.
There were no actresses. Female characters
had to be played by young boys. The acting
profession was not a credible one and it was
unthinkable that any woman would appear
in a play.
Many of the boy actors died of poisoning
due to the vast quantities of lead in their
make-up.
The Globe would have particularly attracted
young people and the were many complaints
of apprentices avoiding work in order to go
to the theater.
Old and New
Exploited literature
http://www.southwarkrosehotel.co.uk/images/SouthwarkMap.jpg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Globe_Theatre
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Shakespeare
http://www.elizabethan-era.org.uk/globe-theatre-facts.htm
Thank you for attention!