In some of Shakespeare's plays, notably Coriolanus, Julius Caesar and Henry VI Part II, there are crowds of common folks. We might call them mobs, from the Latin "mobile vulgus", meaning an excitable crowd. But Shakespeare didn't, as that word had not yet been invented.
An audience or a crowd
What do you mean, what were Greek plays called? They were and are called plays. Most of them were tragedies, if that's what you mean.
the first plays to be called comedies or tragedies would be the greek plays
They're generally called Shakespeare's plays. Sometimes they are called by the type of plays they are: histories, tragedies and comedies. That's how they are referred to in the First Folio, the first compendium of the plays.
Because they are plays with passion
That is called a recital.
Chris O'Dowd.
The Crowd Called UBAD was created in 1972.
A group of people is called a crowd
A band that plays in front of a crowd of people
Politicians
the crowd
A crowd
A large group of people is called a crowd. Use of the word in a sentence would be "A large crowd of people showed up at the free concert in the park."
When people pool together money for exploration it is called crowd-funding. This type of fundraising is also sometimes called crowd financing or crowd sourced capital.
Supernumerary
a mob?