The Utah Shakespearean Festival

  Shakespeare's Audience

 

Seating

Shakespeare’s audience for his outdoor plays was the very rich, the upper middle class, and the lower middle class. The lower middle class paid a penny for admittance to the yard (like the yard outside a school building), where they stood on the ground, with the stage more or less at eye level--these spectators were called groundlings. The upper middle class paid two pennies for entrance to the galleries, covered seating at the sides; the rich paid three pennies to sit in the higher galleries, which had a better view. The best seats were in the lords’ rooms, private galleries closest to the stage.

How much did it cost?

To get an idea of the cost of a ticket in today’s terms, consider that the average blue-collar worker earned five to six pennies a day; bread for his midday meal cost a penny, ale cost another, and, if he were lucky enough to have chicken for dinner, it cost two pennies. His rent was often a shilling (12 pennies) a week, so there wasn’t much money left over for play-going, nor would he have been able to take time off from work to go and see a play in the middle of the day, when they were usually performed.

Activity:

Set the space with room to sit on the floor (for the one-penny seats) a semi-circle of chairs on the floor (for two-penny seats) and tables behind the chairs for three-penny seats. Depending on the size of the class, a second rank of tables with chairs on them may be set up as lords’ rooms.

Before you decide what seating area you wish to be in,“cost out” the price of a ticket, using your allowance as a base for comparison with Elizabethan ticket prices, and deducting amounts for rent and food.

Example: You an allowance of $5 per week, 500 pennies, as compared to the Elizabethan worker’s 36 pennies per week. Therefore, 14 of your pennies equal one of the worker’s pennies. From your weekly allowance you must deduct your food and lodging, which would be 33 pennies Elizabethan (12 pennies for lodging and 3 pennies multiplied by 7 days for food). The worker has 3 pennies left for entertainment or extra chicken or ale. Work out how much you have left for entertainment, and whether you will see one play with a very comfortable seat, or several, standing in the yard.

How was seeing a play in Shakespeare’s time different from seeing a play today?

Shakespeare’s audience was perhaps not as well-behaved as you are. Since the play was so long, people would leave their seats and go looking for food to eat and drink during the performance, or perhaps go visit with their friends. Some playgoers, especially those who had saved up money to come and see the play, were extremely annoyed if they were unable to hear the actors, and would tell rowdy audience members to quiet down.

Later in Shakespeare’s career, his acting company was invited to perform in noble houses and royal courts; the audience there was a good deal more polite, and focused on the play as you do.

Today’s audience

Today, you have a lot of entertainment to choose from, not including the ones you provide yourselves, such as sports and putting on your own shows. Today’s audiences can choose television, movies, or stage shows, and there’s a different kind of behavior that’s right for each one.

Television audiences are the most casual; they don’t have to dress up, they don’t have reserved seats, and they can talk or go to the kitchen whenever they want.

Movie audiences sometimes think they’re at home. Have you ever been annoyed by someone who sat behind you and kicked your chair or talked loudly so you couldn’t hear the movie? And you paid good money to go and see it, too! Then there are the people who can’t decide where to sit, and keep getting up in front of you so you can’t see the screen. What other behaviors have you seen which ruin your enjoyment?

People who go and see theatre (like you) usually pay more for a ticket than they would for a movie, and are most often annoyed by any disturbance. A theatre performance is not something you put on tape and play back on your VCR; it’s like seeing a basketball game live—there aren’t any instant replays. So it requires full attention, and you don’t want to be interrupted by other people talking and moving about.

The actors who put on a show for you also want your attention; they’ve worked for a long time to develop a good production, and you can see them concentrating extremely hard to get the best meanings out of all they have to say and do. If you’ve seen any golf on television, you know that when the golfer is lining up his shot, even the announcers stop talking. What other situations can you think of where you need quiet and full concentration?

Activity:

Take a four- or eight-line speech from the play and try to memorize it while the teacher provides some aural distraction (loud music, some of the students talking, others asking questions). Then write down what you remember. Take another speech of the same length, work in an environment with no distractions, and study it. Then write down what you remember. Finally study a speech in units of two or three students, with the groups as far apart as possible and voices at a low level. This shows that interplay between actors helps memorization. Which method was the most effective for you? Did the distractions bother you? Did working with others help?

 

 

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Cedar City, UT 84720
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