The dichotomy of seating arrangements in the Globe Theater mirrored that of the classes in Elizabethan England. The Pit, or the Yard was the ground level, this was where the low class individuals were put, and it was standing room only. They are often referred to as the "groundlings." Above the groundlings was the tiered seating; the higher the seat, generally, the higher the class of person who occupied it. The "Lord's Rooms," box seats on the extreme sides of the stage, were considered the best seats in the house. They were reserved for nobility, but actually offered a worse view of the performance than the commoners got from the ground.
the Globe Theatre.
The Globe Theatre was used for acting out and making people watch plays.
The "different sections" are governed by price as much as anything. As a result, the cheapest seats (which weren't seats at all, but standing room) went to the poorest people, the more expensive seats to the wealthier people, and the most expensive of all went to the richest.
The Globe Theatre
Cont
the Globe Theatre.
The Globe Theatre was used for acting out and making people watch plays.
The "different sections" are governed by price as much as anything. As a result, the cheapest seats (which weren't seats at all, but standing room) went to the poorest people, the more expensive seats to the wealthier people, and the most expensive of all went to the richest.
The Globe Theatre
The Gielgud Theatre used to be called the Globe Theatre (from 1909 to 1994). But my guess is that's not the Globe Theatre you are thinking of. You probably are mixing up the Globe Theatre (a building where Shakespeare and others acted and which never changed its name) and the Lord Chamberlain's Men (a company or group of actors which performed in a number of different buildings, the Globe theatre included, which changed its name a number of times).
Theatre.
Cont
the globe theatre burnt down because of a stage cannon that was used as a prop accidentlly exploded.
Natural Lighting - the original Globe theatre was an open air amphitheater.
That would be the Globe. None of the others started with G.
All timbers used in the reconstructed Globe are oak.
It was the Theatre Shakespeare's company built in 1599 and where his plays were performed. It could hold up to 3000 spectators standing and sitting. It burned down in 1613, was rebuilt with a different roof and eventually was torn down in the 1640s.The Globe Theatre (called Shakespeare's Globe) isa replica of the 1599 theatre built in London in 1996 and used as a working theatre.