Book contents
- Shakespeare’s Stages
- Shakespeare’s Stages
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Videos
- Audios
- Acknowledgements
- Prologue
- A Tale of Two Playhouses
- City Performance
- Innyard Spaces
- The Playhouse Audience
- The Theatre’s Warm-up Acts
- Constructing the Globe
- Prologue
- Seating and Sightlines
- How Many Doors Had the 1599 Globe?
- The Tiring House
- Stage Decoration
- Shakespeare by Candlelight
- Heavens, Pillars, Trap
- The Balcony
- Music and Sound
- Special Effects
- Epilogue: Bringing the House Down
- Works Cited
Innyard Spaces
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 March 2025
- Shakespeare’s Stages
- Shakespeare’s Stages
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Videos
- Audios
- Acknowledgements
- Prologue
- A Tale of Two Playhouses
- City Performance
- Innyard Spaces
- The Playhouse Audience
- The Theatre’s Warm-up Acts
- Constructing the Globe
- Prologue
- Seating and Sightlines
- How Many Doors Had the 1599 Globe?
- The Tiring House
- Stage Decoration
- Shakespeare by Candlelight
- Heavens, Pillars, Trap
- The Balcony
- Music and Sound
- Special Effects
- Epilogue: Bringing the House Down
- Works Cited
Summary
While a trip to a bar or pub might not conjure up the image of a whole night’s theatrical entertainment for us, for the average Londoner in Shakespeare’s time it often did exactly that. Several large inns located within the City itself, whose yards probably looked a little something like the illustration depicted in Figure 6.1, are known to have hosted all manner of entertainments, including plays performed by Shakespeare’s company and others.
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- Information
- Shakespeare's Stages , pp. 9 - 11Publisher: Cambridge University PressFirst published in: 2025