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  2. English Renaissance theatre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_Renaissance_theatre

    The English Renaissance theatre or Elizabethan theatre was the theatre of England from 1558 to 1642. Its most prominent playwrights were William Shakespeare , Christopher Marlowe and Ben Jonson . Background

  3. Curtain Theatre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curtain_Theatre

    The Curtain Theatre was an Elizabethan playhouse located in Hewett Street, Shoreditch (within the modern London Borough of Hackney), just outside the City of London. It opened in 1577, and continued staging plays until 1624.

  4. Shakespeare's Globe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shakespeare's_Globe

    Shakespeare's Globe is a reconstruction of the Globe Theatre, an Elizabethan playhouse first built in 1599 for which William Shakespeare wrote his plays. Like the original, it is located on the south bank of the River Thames , in Southwark , London.

  5. Shakespeare's plays - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shakespeare's_plays

    When Shakespeare first arrived in London in the late 1580s or early 1590s, dramatists writing for London's new commercial playhouses (such as The Curtain) were combining two strands of dramatic tradition into a new and distinctively Elizabethan synthesis. Previously, the most common forms of popular English theatre were the Tudor morality plays.

  6. The Rose (theatre) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Rose_(theatre)

    The Rose was an Elizabethan playhouse, built by theatre entrepreneur Philip Henslowe in 1587. It was the fifth public playhouse to be built in London, after the Red Lion in Whitechapel (1567), The Theatre (1576) and the Curtain (1577), both in Shoreditch, and the theatre at Newington Butts (c. 1580?

  7. The Theatre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Theatre

    The Theatre was an Elizabethan playhouse in Shoreditch (in Curtain Road, part of the modern London Borough of Hackney), just outside the City of London. Built in 1576, after the Red Lion , it was the first permanent theatre built exclusively for the showing of theatrical productions in England , and its first successful one.

  8. Inn-yard theatre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inn-yard_theatre

    The Elizabethan era is appropriately famous for the construction of the earliest permanent professional playhouses in Britain, starting with James Burbage's The Theatre in 1576 and continuing through the Curtain (), the Rose, Swan, Globe and others —; a development that allowed the evolution of the drama of Christopher Marlowe, William Shakespeare, Ben Jonson and their contemporaries and ...

  9. Wikipedia : WikiProject Elizabethan theatre

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject...

    The scope of this project covered articles relating to the Theatre and dramatic literature in England, between the years 1558 and 1642, spanning the reigns of three princes and sovereigns on the thrones, sharing the crowns: Queen Elizabeth I, King James VI and I as well as King Charles I, for some 84 years; from the year 1558, the first year of Queen Elizabeth's reign, right until the year ...