during shakespeare’s time
DESCRIPTION
Elizabethan Theater Called this to honor the queen, Queen Elizabeth I She loved art, music, drama, and poetry She liked Shakespeare’s plays and protected himTRANSCRIPT
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The TheaterDuring Shakespeare’s Time
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Elizabethan Theater Called this to honor
the queen, Queen Elizabeth I
She loved art, music, drama, and poetry
She liked Shakespeare’s plays and protected him
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Important People to the Theater The “Master of
Revels” was the official censor of plays
He approved or censored content
A patron sponsored an acting company A patron is a rich
citizen of high rank who backed an acting company
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James I Became king in 1603 Was a supporter of
drama James became the
patron of Shakespeare’s acting company
They changed their company name from Lord Chamberlain’s Men to the King’s Men
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The Theater London’s first
theater Built in 1576 Owned by James
Burbage The first theater
derived its shape from the inns
Torn down in 1599
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The Globe Theater Built in 1599 In Southwark (near
London) Was financed by
James Burbage’s sons
Construced out of the timber from The Theater
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The Globe Called the
“wooden O” Resembled a small
football stadium Unroofed yard in
the center
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Parts of the Globe
Yard (where groundlings stood)
Platform (main acting area)Permanent Door (stage entrance and exit)
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Parts of the Globe
Trap Door (lead to an area beneath the stage known as Hell)
Galleries (3 tiers of seats for audience members)
Study (inner stage)
Terras (balcony)
Chamber (upper stage)
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Parts of the Globe
Musician’s Gallery
Canopy (represented the sky) Huts
(represented the Heavens)
Flag
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The Globe Peasants who paid a
penny and stood in the yard to watch a performance were called groundlings
Wealthier spectators could spend 2-3 pennies to sit in the galleries
Seating/standing capacity of 3000
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Performances Held in the afternoon
(2:00) because there was no artificial lighting
Without microphones, actors would often have to shout lines
A flag would be hoisted on the day of a performance
The start of a play was signaled by a trumpet sounding 3 times
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Staging and Scenery Most plays lasted two
hours There was little
interruption because scenery wasn’t used
The audience gained an understanding of the play from the costumes, props, music, sound effects, and dialogue
Setting was established with words
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Costumes Were colorful and
expensive Usually donated by
rich patrons
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Costumes Would establish a
character’s status (wealthy, poor, soldier, king, etc.)
Was symbolic of a character’s morality
White = purity Black = evil Red = violence, blood
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Acting Companies Consisted of 25-30
actors Female roles played
by boys Each company had a
clown for comic relief
Plays were written with actors and their abilities in mind
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Shakespeare’s Acting Company Richard Burbage (a
great tragic actor in Shakespeare’s company)
Will Kempe (a famous comedian in Shakepeare’s company) Shakespeare
Richard Burbage
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The Life of the Globe Burned down in
1613 when a cannon shot caught the roof on fire
Rebuilt in 1614 Closed in 1642 by
the Puritans (thought the theater was sinful)
Torn down in 1644
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The New Globe Theater A replica of The
Globe now stands on the original site
It was a 45 million dollar reconstruction
Opened in 1997