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      • 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.
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  2. Shakespeare's audience would have been composed of tanners, butchers, iron-workers, millers, seamen from the ships docked in the Thames, glovers, servants, shopkeepers, wig-makers, bakers, and countless other tradesmen and their families. Ben Jonson commented on the diversity of the playgoers in his verses praising Fletcher's The Faithful ...

  3. A Definition Plus Some Fun Facts. It is thought that Shakespeare coined the word ‘groundlings’, which became the nickname for those audience members who stood at the theatre. In Elizabethan theatres, the stage was surrounded by some space before the terraced rows of seats began, and the groundlings stood, crowded together, on the bare earth ...

  4. In January of 1974, Gary Austin announced that he wanted to create a theatre company. Taking its name from the group of lower class audience members who stood on the ground in front of the stage to watch plays in Shakespeare's day, "The Groundlings" was officially incorporated as a non-profit organization.

  5. The Groundlings is an American improvisational and sketch comedy troupe and school based in Los Angeles, California. The troupe was formed by Gary Austin in 1974 and uses an improv format influenced by Viola Spolin, whose improvisational theater techniques were taught by Del Close and other members of the Second City, located in Chicago and ...

    • 1974; 49 years ago
  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › GroundlingGroundling - Wikipedia

    An imagined Elizabethan theatre, the groundlings standing in the bottom right The pit and upper levels of the reconstruction of the Globe. A groundling was a person who visited the Red Lion, The Rose, or the Globe theatres in the early 17th century. They were too poor to pay to be able to sit on one of the three levels of the theatre.

  7. Jul 27, 2012 · 2.3K views. 5 minute read. Amanda Festa. Take a peek “behind the article” as Literary Traveler talks with Michael Hartigan, the author of our July 23 rd article, “I am Not an Original Groundling.”. We had a few more questions for the writer concerning his love of Shakespeare, his advice for literary travelers taking a jaunt across the ...

  8. Oct 2, 2012 · In nearly every depiction of Elizabethan England from Shakespeare in Love to the more recent film Anonymous, the audience of the famed Globe Theatre has been portrayed as a brawling, heaving, unwashed rabble who came to be known as “groundlings.” According to the Oxford English Dictionary, a groundling is “a frequenter of the ‘ground ...

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