dilluns, 22 de novembre del 2010

1. Where about in London were the Theatres located? Why?
In the "Liberties ", outside the City walls and on the south bank of the river, called Southwark. Because the City Council(guilds) together with the Puritans did not approve of the playhouses.
2. Name the most important theatres during Elizabethan times.
Fortune, Globe, Hope, Red Bull, Rose, Swan, Theatre & the
Whitefriars Theatre
3. Which was the first playhouse in London? Who built it?
The Theatre was the first public playhouse of London, located in the parish of St. Leonard's, Shoreditch. It was designed and built by James Burbage.
4. When was it built? When was it closed?
The Theatre was a roofless, circular building with three galleries surrounding a yard. It opened in 1576, and several companies performed there, including Leicester's Men, the Admiral's Men and Chamberlain's Men, who were associated with William Shakespeare. After the death of James Burbage in February 1597, the theatre's lease ended. In 1598 the building was dismantled, and Burbage's sons, Cuthbert and Richard, used its timbers to construct the first Globe Theatre.
5. Describe the particular shape of the theatres. Where did they take this shape from?
The theatres were circular, open-air buildings, surrounded an open yard (like the Inn-Yards) with the stage at one end, jutting out into the audience to about half the depth of the theatre; the width was considerably more. Round three sides of the yard were three tiers of galleries where the wealthier or superior members of the audience sat; the rest of the audience stood in the open yard around the stage and (for obvious reasons) they were known as 'the Groundlings'. The original Theatre was designed in a mix of traditions. Its circular shape, though, reflected not the Roman D but the gatherings of crowds in town marketplaces, where all the players of 1576 got their training. Building a scaffold with three levels of galleries surrounding a circular yard copied the arrangement for audiences of existing bearbaiting and bull baiting houses.
6. Who controlled the performances on behalf of the government?
The person who controlled the performances of plays on behalf of the government was the Master of Revels. In the 1590s this was a man called Edmund Tilney.
7. Why could the theatres be closed down?
Playhouses could be closed for many reasons, among them outbreaks of the plague, sedition and immorality, which would certainly have included women appearing on stage.
8. Who played the parts of women on stage? Why?
Young men, as it was thought immoral for women to act in plays, even to attend the playhouses.
9. Did women attend the theatre?
Yes, women did attend the theatre although this was not formally approved of. Even legend says Queen Elizabeth attended the Globe secretly some times.
10. How much did it cost to stand in the yard? And to sit in a gallery? And to have a cushion? And to sit in the lords’ room?
It cost one penny to stand in the yard of the playhouse and a further penny for a seat in one of the covered galleries. A cushion to make watching the play more comfortable cost a further penny and a seat in the Lords' room cost approximately sixpence.
 

Biografia William Shakespeare

dilluns, 8 de novembre del 2010

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1. What was the name of the company Shakespeare belonged to?
William Shakespeare's theatre company was The Chamberlain's Men, named after The Lord Chamberlain, an official responsible for royal and public entertainment.
2. How many companies were licensed to perform in London?
Only two.
3. Why did Shakespeare's company build the Globe?
Shakespeare's company built the Globe because they couldn’t use the special playhouse that their chief actor Richard Burbage's father had built for them in 1596, a roofed theatre inside the city, in Blackfriars. In 1576, James BurbageIn built the first successful amphitheatre, known as The Theatre, in a London suburb. Twenty years later, when the lease on The Theatre's land was about to expire, he built the Blackfriars as its replacement. But the wealthy residents of Blackfriars got the government to block its use for plays, so his capital was locked up uselessly.
 4.  What did Shakespeare's company use to build the Globe?
The Theatre had closed, ostensibly for good, in 1597, and the owner of the land on which it stood threatened to pull the building down once the lease had expired. The Burbages and their associates anticipated the threat, however, and in late 1598 dismantled The Theatre and carried the materials to Bankside (a district of Southwark stretching for about half a mile west of London Bridge on the south bank of the River Thames).

5. Who built the Globe?
Two brothers, Cuthbert and Richard Burbage, who inherited its predecessor, The Theatre, from their father, James.
6. When the Globe was built, there were two other theatres in Southwark already. Which ones? The Swan and The Rose
7. When was it built?
It was completed by the autumn of 1599.
8. How and when was it destroyed?
In 1613, during a performance of Henry VIII, the thatch of the Globe was set alight by a cannon, set off to mark the King's entrance onstage in a scene at Cardinal Wolsey's palace. The entire theatre was destroyed within the hour.
9. When was it rebuilt?
By June 1614 it had been rebuilt, this time with a tiled gallery roof and a circular shape.
10. When was it finally pulled down? Why?
It was pulled down in 1644, two years after the Puritans closed all theatres, to make way for tenement dwellings.
11. Explain how acting at the Globe was like.
Acting at the Globe was radically different from viewing modern Shakespeare on screen. The plays were staged in the afternoons, using the light of day. Therefore, all references to weather or time of the day had to be given to the audience through the text. The audience surrounded the stage on all sides. No scenery was used, except for occasional emblematic devices like a throne or a bed. It was almost impossible not to see the other half of the audience standing behind the players. Consequently much of the staging was metatheatrical, conceding the illusory nature of the game of playing, and making little pretense to stage realism.

12. Complete this chart :

THEATRE
The Rose and the Fortune
The Theatre and The Globe
COMPANY
LORD ALMIRAL'S MEN
LORD CHAMBERLAIN'S MEN
PLAYWRITER
Christopher Marlowe
William Shakespeare
MAIN ACTOR
Edward Alleyn
Richard Burbage
MANAGER
Philip Henslowe 
The Burbages
PATRON
Lord Charles Howard
Lord Chamberlain