Shakespeare's Globe
Teach
Search
Search
Menu
Home
Home
Browse
Browse
My Resources
My Resources
Help
Help
Log in
Search results
Fact Sheet: Playhouses
There were two different types of playhouse in London in Shakespeare’s time: outdoor and indoor.
Add to My Resources
Remove from My Resources
Fact Sheet: Audiences
By 1600, between 10,000 and 20,000 people a week went to London theatres.
Add to My Resources
Remove from My Resources
Fact Sheet: Writing Plays
Just about everyone in London went to the theatre, but what did they go and see?
Add to My Resources
Remove from My Resources
Fact Sheet: Actors
The life of an actor changed dramatically during Shakespeare’s lifetime...
Add to My Resources
Remove from My Resources
Fact Sheet: Costumes and Cosmetics
Stage make-up, like costumes, helped the audience to understand characters.
Add to My Resources
Remove from My Resources
Fact Sheet: The Third Globe
The current Shakespeare’s Globe in London can be called the third (reconstructed) Globe.
Add to My Resources
Remove from My Resources
Fact Sheet: Indoor Theatres
Indoor theatres grew out of temporary theatres in existing buildings set up for private performances.
Add to My Resources
Remove from My Resources
Previous Productions
Our Previous Productions archive has information about all of our previous shows.
Add to My Resources
Remove from My Resources
Romeo & Juliet: Productions
Previous productions of Romeo and Juliet at the Globe.
Add to My Resources
Remove from My Resources
Macbeth: Productions
Previous productions of Macbeth at the Globe.
Add to My Resources
Remove from My Resources
Twelfth Night: Original Practice
Learn more about the methods used in Elizabethan or Jacobean theatre.
Add to My Resources
Remove from My Resources
Midsummer: Productions
Previous productions of A Midsummer Night's Dream at the Globe.
Add to My Resources
Remove from My Resources
Show More
Close