Globe Theater is one of the most famous theaters of the Elizabethan era. The Elizabeth era started in 1558 and lasted 1603 years. It is said that the theater of this age was the most important and important part of the culture of the time. Because black death kills people every day, people need to get rid of this death sentence. It all began in the hotel garden. A group of people will appear from one village to another for people in the market and village squares.
Universal City is in the west side of the London Bridge, the south bank of the River Thames in the Bankside Area. This is a dirty part of the city where there are often prostitutes, pickpockets and other annoying people. The original glove theater is a theater, the stage is 4 to 6 feet tall from the ground. Curtains are not opened or closed at the beginning or end of play. Men also play all characters, Juliet, Cleopatra, even Ophelia. An actor who plays gods, ghosts, demons, and other supernatural characters can jump out of the underworld through the pitfalls on the stage or get off the ceiling to the earth from the sky. On the stage, metal ripples sometimes thunder. Stagehands explodes fireworks and creates anger of aura, meteor, comet, or the Almighty. Instruments such as oboe and cornet sometimes offer music
I have little knowledge about the original Grove Theater. It is believed to be the 8th aspect. This is an exterior theater, round and three stories. The Globe Theater has a platform stage where audiences sit on three sides. It resembles a modern thrust theater. The original glove theater was baked in 1613. Thatched roof and gypsum building set fire on Henry No. 12 during the show. Most of the evidence left from the world theater is on the stage of the Shakespeare Theater. It is thought that the stage has 4 pitfalls. An actor can walk to the smaller and bigger people who need machine assistance. In these traps, witches come out and everyone has their own door. Upward and downward, with the effect of smoke. This message was supported by Macbeth's "Why do you sink that cauldron?" (Nagler 23)
Shakespeare's Globe Theater redeveloped William Shakespeare on the south coast of the River Thames, Elizabeth Theater Surround Theater in the autonomous zone of London. The original theater was built in 1599 and destroyed by fire in 1613. It was rebuilt in 1614 and then destroyed in 1644. The reconstruction of the modern Globe Theater is based on the existing 1599 and 1614 academic approximation of building evidence. This is considered to be very realistic, but we know that with the latest security requirements we can only accommodate 1,400 spectators, not the original theater 3000.