The story of the Globe Theatre, the ancestral home of Shakespeare’s plays, is itself very Shakespearean, in all of the ways we use that adjective: it has deep roots in English history, a tragic backstory, and represents all of the hodgepodge of London, in the early 17th century and today, with the city’s colorful street life, mingling of international cultures, high and low, and its delight in the play and interplay of languages.
“The first public playhouses,” notes the British Library, “were built in London in the late 1500s. Theatres were not permitted within the boundaries of the City itself”—theater not being considered a respectable art—”but were tolerated in the outer districts of London, such as Southwark, where the Globe was located. Southwark was notorious for its noisy, chaotic entertainments and for its sleazy low-life: its theatres, brothels, bear baiting pits, pickpockets and the like.”
The Globe began its life in 1599, in a story that “might be worthy,” writes the Shakespeare Resource Center, “of a Shakespearean play of its own.” Built from the timbers of the city’s first permanent theater, the Burbage, which opened in 1576, the Globe burned down in 1613 “when a cannon shot during a performance of Henry VIII ignited the thatched roof in the gallery.” Within the year, it was rebuilt on the same foundations (with a tiled roof) and operated until the Puritans shut it down in 1642, demolishing the famed open-air theater two years later.
In a twist to this so far very English tale, it took the tireless efforts of an expatriate American, actor-director Sam Wanamaker, to bring the Globe back to London. After more than two decades of advocacy, Wanamaker’s Globe Playhouse Trust succeeded in recreating the Globe, just a short distance from the original location. Opening in 1997, three-hundred and fifty-five years after the first Globe closed, the new Globe Theatre recreated all of the original’s architectural elements.
The stage projects into the circular courtyard, designed for standing spectators and surrounded by three tiers of seats. While the stage itself has an elaborate painted roof, and the seating is protected from the weather by the only thatched roof in London since the 1666 Great Fire, the theater’s courtyard is open to the sky. However, where the original Globe held about 2,000 standing and 1,000 seated playgoers, the recreation, notes TimeOut London, holds only about half that number.
Still, theater-goers can “get a rich feel for what it was like to be a ‘groundling’ (the standing rabble at the front of the stage) in the circular, open-air theatre.” Short of that, we can tour the Globe in the virtual recreation at the top of the post. Move around in any direction and look up at the sky. As you do, click on the tiny circles to reveal facts such as “Probably the first Shakespeare play to be performed at the Globe was Julius Caesar, in 1599,” and videos like Mark Antony’s famous “friends, Romans, countrymen” speech, performed at the Globe, above.
If you don’t have the luxury of visiting the new Globe, taking a tour, or seeing a performance lovingly-recreated with all of the costuming (and even pronunciation) from Jacobean England, you can get the flavor of this wondrous achievement in bringing cultural history into the present with the virtual tour, also available as an app for iPhone and iPad users. This interactive tour supersedes a previous version we featured a few years back.
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Related Content:
The 1,700+ Words Invented by Shakespeare*
What Shakespeare’s Handwriting Looked Like
Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness
I didn’t know thanos was one of his fans.
Dad get off the wifi my fortnite game is lagging
I’m getting dizzy
that dang john wick
Mom what are you doing to dad in the room p
The fact that you guys are on this website at the same time is kinda weird. Btw… look out your window.
The fact that you guys are on this website at the same time is kinda odd… btw, look out your window.
I like but
i kind like cock
step bro what are you doing im stuck underneath the bed
Ben Dover, a name you can trust at high speeds.
.
Hi, im cameron mcnair. And like im kinda sus like bro
Do I sEE StePsIs sTuCk???
Thanos rules the aetheists
b̵̨̡̧̢̨̡̡̢̢̡̢͎̻̹͙̠̠͚͇͔͍̣͍͎̻̤̣̱̟͖̘̥̩̦͎͓̹͙̣̬̫̞̗̼̮̥̙̠̤͉̺̘̻͓̗̰͎̰͈͈͓̝̖̹͚̰͈͓̟̞̻͖͕͍̮̱̱̥̘͉͕̹͍͉̱̟̯͉̗̯̣̻̭͎̯̗̰͉̜̭͕̼͓͕͈̠͙̝̩̟̜̖̺̦̜̼͎̬̰͎̦̻̟̞͈̤̦̫̙͚̰̞͈̘͍̮̻̟̝͎̲̤̱̞̳̲̱̹̲̭̰̥̝̘̭͔͈̩̞̯̱̞͍̿̍̀̍̈́̿̀̃̌̆̂͛̽̋̒̓̍̓̎̽̂̀́͌̌̋͐̏̓̌͊̎͐͘͜͜͝͝͝ͅͅͅͅe̶̡̧̨̧̡̢̡̧̛̛̛̛̛̛̼̦̘̯̤̭̮͖̦̗̰͙͓͖̗̝̱̭͍͕͉̖̠̰͕̙͚̭͈̱̭̖̳͕̘̬̲̞̺͔̺͍̦̗̬̤͓̤̞̮͙͈̖̘̬̬̬̖̺̗̭͙̠̗̲̜̼̟̭̯̬͈̙͕͉̪̙͈͚͉͂̓͋͂̒̊͂͊̂̀̋̃̿̄̈́̌́̽̄̇͒̂͋͆͐̌̂͊͌̉́̽̒̔̈́́̍͋́̑̋͑͌̎̽̒̋̐̔̈̋͊̃͋͌͂̈́̿̾̿͊̋́̔̽̀̑͌̑͂̑̄̿͛̄̾̓̄́̐͐̾̋̿̃̉͐̋͐̃̈̋̏̓̋̏́̔͑̉͒̊̅͑̀̇̔̽̽͑͒̂͂͊͋̅̉̈̀͐̎̅̈̈́̏͆͆͐̑̒͗̊̽̏̉̌͂̃̃̅̑̈̄̋͑͗̌̓̄̌̈́̽́̃̍͂͛̃̓̍̑̄́̎͌́̅̽̒͑̈̍͆́̒̀̎͛͊̅̓̆̒̇̆̓̌̽̄́̐͂̃̋̎̊́̏̍̔̒̔̄͛̔͑͒̎̅̄̄̊̓̉͐̈́̐̑̓̈́́́̀̽̀̓̓̽͘̚͘̚̕̚͘͘̚͘̕̕̕͘͘̕̚̕̚͘̚͘͘͘̚̚͠͝͝͠͝͠͝͝͝͠͠͝͠͠͝͠͠͝͝͝͝͝͝͝͝ͅp̴̡̡̢̢̧̡̡̨̧̨̡̧̘͖̣̘̥̜̮̦̬͎̘̻̗̰̙̰̥͚̹͓̘̙̭̩̻̲̼͚͖̼͎̤̙̝͈̗͇͙͎̩̖̯̪̯͖̮͙͖͙̼̻̺̱̜͚͇̰̲̖̗͙͉͉̝̱̥͓̬̦̣̬̤̱͓̱͉̰̭̲̰͈̮̠̥̜͙͔̹͉̼̺̞̫͇̥̻̘̩͚̖͈̩̤̺̰̞̞͉̖͇͍͍͎̤͚͕̤̞͖̩̫͔̻͖̲͉̈́̇͗̀̐̇̓̊̉̇͋̋͆̍͒́̅͗̊̒̉͌̽͆̾́͛͌̀͘͜͜͜͠ͅͅi̶̢̢̛̛̛̛͎͎̘̼̼̭̺̻͈̗̙̭̺͈̲͈̥̲̘̞͇̲̗͎͖̱͍̜̠̳̮̬͚̠͇̍̅̂͆̽͑̇̅͐͗̾͒͗̄́͌͒̂̀͛́͐̊͗̅̀͂̊͒̊͆̈́̈́́͌̀̑̈̋͊̈́̂̄̈̆̃̓̈́́̉̈̿̅̊̇̐͌͌̆͊̊̀͋͂̋̎̓͂̌̋̍͐̔̊̆͆͐̾̿̔̓̀͋̈́̊̎̈́͌͐̓̉͊̈́̇́́͋̀̆̐͛̒̃̈́̍̈̀̏͆̽̐͂͑̊͌̂͐́̌̄͂̓͒̈́̈͌̔̾́͛̐̿̉̓͊͊̕̚̚͘̕̚͝͝͝͝͝͠͝͝͠ͅş̷̨̡̢̢̢̡̨̧̢̛̛̛̛͙̠͈̟̖̯̲͙̙̫̙̰̜̗͙̜̲̮̫̘̹̲̞͇̮̙̰͔̣̠̯̰͕̻̩͖͍̜̼̱̣̣͔̟̱͙͍͚͉͉̦̩͚̠̥̯͍̪̭̞͈̲̘͓̰̣̬̫͚̬̩͔̖̮͎͈̬̫͖̯̦̪̯̞̮̱͈͓̘͕̜̘̬͇̜̳̞̓̎̈̔̌̄̓͛̀̆͛͊̉̂̈́̅̓̄̍̇̊̈́̑̔͂̀̔̇̓̇̇̅̆̈́͐̃̆̃͊̔͂̐̄͂̋͛̾̀̍̓̉͂͊̇̉̎̿̈́̉̈̒̒̉̽̈́̈͊͌̓͐̓̆̈́̽̿̍̅͗̏͐́͌͗̂́͑͒͊̄́̃̂͛͑̏̄̇̀͆͑̐̑̊̍̆́̀̅͛̾̆̈́̔̒̄͋̿̈́̈͌́́̉͊͆̇͆̽͂͐͛̒̈́͗́̈̋̽̐̄͌̄̌͑̽̆̋́̿̈́̇̎̑̑̆̄̍̓̏͊̅̐̈́̈͆̐̓̚͘̚͘̕͘̚̚͘̕͜͜͝͠͝͠͠͝͝͠͝͝͝ͅͅͅͅ
Im old
NIGGGER
This was cool because I got to see all the great details about this building.
ass
Bro u are not gonna believe this
The story of the Globe Theatre, the ancestral home of Shakespeare’s plays, is itself very Shakespearean, in all of the ways we use that adjective: it has deep roots in English history, a tragic backstory, and represents all of the hodgepodge of London, in the early 17th century and today, with the city’s colorful street life, mingling of international cultures, high and low, and its delight in the play and interplay of languages.
“The first public playhouses,” notes the British Library, “were built in London in the late 1500s. Theatres were not permitted within the boundaries of the City itself”—theater not being considered a respectable art—”but were tolerated in the outer districts of London, such as Southwark, where the Globe was located. Southwark was notorious for its noisy, chaotic entertainments and for its sleazy low-life: its theatres, brothels, bear baiting pits, pickpockets and the like.”
The Globe began its life in 1599, in a story that “might be worthy,” writes the Shakespeare Resource Center, “of a Shakespearean play of its own.” Built from the timbers of the city’s first permanent theater, the Burbage, which opened in 1576, the Globe burned down in 1613 “when a cannon shot during a performance of Henry VIII ignited the thatched roof in the gallery.” Within the year, it was rebuilt on the same foundations (with a tiled roof) and operated until the Puritans shut it down in 1642, demolishing the famed open-air theater two years later.
In a twist to this so far very English tale, it took the tireless efforts of an expatriate American, actor-director Sam Wanamaker, to bring the Globe back to London. After more than two decades of advocacy, Wanamaker’s Globe Playhouse Trust succeeded in recreating the Globe, just a short distance from the original location. Opening in 1997, three-hundred and fifty-five years after the first Globe closed, the new Globe Theatre recreated all of the original’s architectural elements.
The stage projects into the circular courtyard, designed for standing spectators and surrounded by three tiers of seats. While the stage itself has an elaborate painted roof, and the seating is protected from the weather by the only thatched roof in London since the 1666 Great Fire, the theater’s courtyard is open to the sky. However, where the original Globe held about 2,000 standing and 1,000 seated playgoers, the recreation, notes TimeOut London, holds only about half that number.
Still, theater-goers can “get a rich feel for what it was like to be a ‘groundling’ (the standing rabble at the front of the stage) in the circular, open-air theatre.” Short of that, we can tour the Globe in the virtual recreation at the top of the post. Move around in any direction and look up at the sky. As you do, click on the tiny circles to reveal facts such as “Probably the first Shakespeare play to be performed at the Globe was Julius Caesar, in 1599,” and videos like Mark Antony’s famous “friends, Romans, countrymen” speech, performed at the Globe, above.
If you don’t have the luxury of visiting the new Globe, taking a tour, or seeing a performance lovingly-recreated with all of the costuming (and even pronunciation) from Jacobean England, you can get the flavor of this wondrous achievement in bringing cultural history into the present with the virtual tour, also available as an app for iPhone and iPad users. This interactive tour supersedes a previous version we featured a few years back.
Its a historical theater that got burned in an accident with a cannon in the Henry the 8th when they rebuilt the theater with a new roof in the same year but the following two years the building got demolished,then an american actor named Sam Wanamaker stood trying to get people to help him protest to rebuild the theater and after two decades advocacy the plan worked after 335 years after the original shut down the new one was born looking exactly like the original.
Born looking just like the original
WHy Am I sTuCk StEp BrO HeLp Me PlEaSe
that is a beautiful stage.
the stage is really pretty
The 360 view was cool. i liked seeing the videos.
why are the comments such a mess what the heck
Dang bro that’s aggressive
districts of London, such as Southwark, where the Globe was located
what the 𝓯𝓾𝓬𝓴 is up with these comments–
Lmaooooo
nice 360 tour
i wanna contribute to the chaos
The Globe began its life in 1599, in a story that “might be worthy,” writes the Shakespeare Resource Center, “of a Shakespearean play of its own.” Built from the timbers of the city’s first permanent theater, the Burbage, which opened in 1576, the Globe burned down in 1613 “when a cannon shot during a performance of Henry VIII ignited the thatched roof in the gallery.”
I loved how there are so many different kinds of theaters and musicians and music in the world.
We all do
Funky me harder dady
MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM I am very uncomfortable with the atmosphere we have created in the studio today @~@
cheeks
You guys are not funny, just stop.
I’d rather be the main character in one of Shakespeare’s plays than read through this comment section again.
I went there and my uncle touched my bum with his pp now I’m president obama
ye
I’ll take a potato chip
and eat it
wdym you dont wanna be my sussy little baka bbg
HELP HE“S GOT US TRAPPED IN HERE WE ONLY GET ONE PRINGLE A WEEK HELP PLS
children
all of you children out there
we see what you are typing
WE ARE READING THEM ALOUD TO OUR CLASS
please it’s been the highlight of my day
Drury is a sussy baka ;)
he is the sussiest of all the bakas
damn yall need therapy more than the Winchesters and that’s saying something
Shakespeare’s boner
no
Among us is a dead meme pls stop saying “sussy baka” I’m frustrated and irritable
NICE
The Hog Rider card is unlocked from the Spell Valley (Arena 5). He is a quick building-targeting, melee troop with moderately high hitpoints and damage. He appears just like his Clash of Clans counterpart; a man with brown eyebrows, a beard, a mohawk, and a golden body piercing in his left ear who is riding a hog. A Hog Rider card costs 4 Elixir to deploy.
According to all known laws of aviation, there is no way a bee should be able to fly.
Its wings are too small to get its fat little body off the ground.
The bee, of course, flies anyway because bees don’t care what humans think is impossible.
Yellow, black. Yellow, black. Yellow, black. Yellow, black.
Ooh, black and yellow!
Let’s shake it up a little.
Barry! Breakfast is ready!
Coming!
Hang on a second.
Hello?
Barry?
Adam?
Can you believe this is happening?
I can’t.
I’ll pick you up.
Looking sharp.
Use the stairs, Your father paid good money for those.
Sorry. I’m excited.
Here’s the graduate.
We’re very proud of you, son.
A perfect report card, all B’s.
Very proud.
Ma! I got a thing going here.
You got lint on your fuzz.
Ow! That’s me!
Wave to us! We’ll be in row 118,000.
Bye!
Barry, I told you, stop flying in the house!
Hey, Adam.
Hey, Barry.
Is that fuzz gel?
A little. Special day, graduation.
Never thought I’d make it.
Three days grade school, three days high school.
Those were awkward.
Three days college. I’m glad I took a day and hitchhiked around The Hive.
You did come back different.
Hi, Barry. Artie, growing a mustache? Looks good.
Hear about Frankie?
Yeah.
You going to the funeral?
No, I’m not going.
Everybody knows, sting someone, you die.
Don’t waste it on a squirrel.
Such a hothead.
I guess he could have just gotten out of the way.
I love this incorporating an amusement park into our day.
That’s why we don’t need vacations.
Boy, quite a bit of pomp under the circumstances.
Well, Adam, today we are men.
We are!
Bee-men.
Amen!
Hallelujah!
Students, faculty, distinguished bees,
please welcome Dean Buzzwell.
Welcome, New Hive City graduating class of 9:15.
That concludes our ceremonies And begins your career at Honex Industries!
Will we pick our job today?
I heard it’s just orientation.
Heads up! Here we go.
Keep your hands and antennas inside the tram at all times.
Wonder what it’ll be like?
A little scary.
Welcome to Honex, a division of Honesco and a part of the Hexagon Group.
This is it!
Wow.
Wow.
We know that you, as a bee, have worked your whole life to get to the point where you can work for your whole life.
Honey begins when our valiant Pollen Jocks bring the nectar to The Hive.
Our top-secret formula is automatically color-corrected, scent-adjusted and bubble-contoured into this soothing sweet syrup with its distinctive golden glow you know as… Honey!
That girl was hot.
She’s my cousin!
She is?
Yes, we’re all cousins.
Right. You’re right.
At Honex, we constantly strive to improve every aspect of bee existence.
These bees are stress-testing a new helmet technology.
What do you think he makes?
Not enough.
Here we have our latest advancement, the Krelman.
What does that do?
Catches that little strand of honey that hangs after you pour it.
Saves us millions.
Can anyone work on the Krelman?
Of course. Most bee jobs are small ones.
But bees know that every small job, if it’s done well, means a lot.
But choose carefully because you’ll stay in the job you pick for the rest of your life.
The same job the rest of your life? I didn’t know that.
What’s the difference?
You’ll be happy to know that bees, as a species, haven’t had one day off in 27 million years.
So you’ll just work us to death?
We’ll sure try.
Wow! That blew my mind!
yes i agree, they are very interesting as well as lovely <3
I Pledge allegiance, to the flag, of the United States of America
And to the republic, for which it stands, one nation under God
Indivisible, with liberty and justice for all
I pledge allegiance to the flag
Of the United States of America
And to the republic, for which it stands
One nation under God
Indivisible
With liberty and justice for all
The pledge of allegiance to the flag,
As a pledge to the ideals of our Forefathers
The men who fought and died, for the building of the great nation
It’s a pledge to fulfill our duties and obligations as citizens of the United States
And to uphold the principals of our constitution.
And last but not least, it’s a pledge to maintain the four great freedoms
Cherished by all Americans, freedom of speech, freedom of religion
Freedom for want, and freedom from fear.
I pledge allegiance, to the flag
Of the United States of America.
And to the religion, for which it stands,
One nation under God
Indivisible
With liberty and justice for all.
same bro. same
same bro. sam
hey anyone wanna smash later this week? im bored
Y’all tweakin on the shakespearian site. Where can i find heizenburg and is santa real? anyways if you find a cute asian for me just msg me on discord .vamptom
chicken burger
suk a niga dick
mannnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn idek what this is
Balls and 2
i hate my english
i hate my english class 8th grade
bro these comments are wild
Hi everyone I am so happy to be in my english class educating about shakespeare :) I love my teacher is so nice im so happy. I am going to go brush my teeth now by bye its my bed time
“i didnt kno2 thanos was one of his fans”
fr tho, I cant be typing like that cause our teachers can see our chromebooks from theirs computers.
What a shame that the theatre burned down during my show.