Upload
chrislivesey
View
1.336
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
THE GLOBE
© 2005 www.teachit.co.uk 1 3712
How much do you know about the Globe?
Scripts Playwright
Effects
Puritans
Actors
Groundlings
The Plague
Cutpurses
THE GLOBE
© 2005 www.teachit.co.uk 2 3712
Here’s a quick quiz. See if you can guess the correct
answer before it is revealed.
THE GLOBE
© 2005 www.teachit.co.uk 3 3712
Groundlings were:
1. The land the theatre was built upon.
2. Audience members who had to stand on the floor.
3. The pillars used on stage that connected with the ground.
How did the audience know the play was going to
start?
1. They would check their watch or mobile phone.
2. An actor would shout from the stage.
3. A trumpet was sounded.
Pick out the right answer from three choices.
THE GLOBE
© 2005 www.teachit.co.uk 4 3712
A Playwright is the:
1. Author of the play.
2. The person who checked the play for any problems.
3. The person who would prompt the actors if they forgot their lines.
Shakespeare was a shareholder in the Globe.
This meant: 1. He could sell spare seats in performances to friends.
2. He had shares in the success of the company
andthe theatre.
3. He was the spare actorwho might take a part at the last minute.
Pick out the right answer from three choices.
THE GLOBE
© 2005 www.teachit.co.uk 5 3712
Puritans were:
1. Strict protestants who were very religious and who were against the theatres.
2. People who liked to wash their hands.
3. Theatre fans.
Actors learnt their part:
1. By being given a copy of the whole play for them to use.
2. By being told their lines.
3. By being given a section of the play with just their part on it.
THE GLOBE
© 2005 www.teachit.co.uk 6 3712
Plays and theatres were:
1. Enjoyed by everyone in society.
2. Blamed for spreading the plague and crime.
3. Only open on a Tuesday.
Going to the theatre cost:
1. Nothing at all.
2. 50p to stand and £1 for a seat.
3. Only 1 penny for a groundling to stand.
THE GLOBE
© 2005 www.teachit.co.uk 7 3712
The Plague:
1. Was not contagious.
2. Was an infectious disease spread by rats.
3. Was only found in London because of the theatres.
A Cutpurse was:
1. Elizabethan slang for thieves who would cut your purse from your belt.
2. A bargain – cut price – cutpurse.
3. A fashion item in Elizabethan times.
THE GLOBE
© 2005 www.teachit.co.uk 8 3712
Can you remember all the answers?
Write down a meaning for each word. (You only have a few
seconds.)Are you ready?
HERE GOES...
THE GLOBE
© 2005 www.teachit.co.uk 9 3712
Groundlings Playwright
THE GLOBE
© 2005 www.teachit.co.uk 10 3712
ScriptsCutpurse
THE GLOBE
© 2005 www.teachit.co.uk 11 3712
The plaguePuritans
THE GLOBE
© 2005 www.teachit.co.uk 12 3712
How well did you do?
Did you learn anything new?
Keep an eye out for these ideas and vocabulary in the rest of the
lesson!
THE GLOBE
© 2005 www.teachit.co.uk 13 3712
Copy down the meanings of any words you don’t know.Playwright is the author of the play.
Puritans were strict religious believers who were against the theatres.
Groundlings were the theatre audience who stood on the floor.
Scripts were the copies of the play given to actors with just their lines on.
Cutpurses were thieves who would steal purses from audience goers while they were distracted.