Saturday, 18 August 2012

Theatre site - from Globe theatre research

Site


The Elizabethan playhouses in London were (mostly) all built on the outside of the city walls (seen as not politically/socially acceptable).
Odeon is now on the fringe of the city frame (within the frame) for different reasons. Historically,..
  • at the time (1594-1604) were an oversupply of ampitheatre playhouses in London
  • amiptheatre playhouses were all on the periphery of London, outside city walls in an 'entertainment ghetto' alongside animal baiting and brothels - a bustling unfashionable locality
    • many spectators would have felt that in attending the Globe, they were engaging in something slightly risque

Design


The form:  there was no obvious medieval tradition of circular or polygonal structures apart from animal baiting arenas - but hardly likely that such a grand structure would be purely imitating these. Theories below:
  • Stonehenge
    • similarity with Stonehenge dimensions (dressed inner faces form tangents to a circle of just over 97 feet across - Globe was around 99 foot); however, from the centres of the stonehenge stones the same measurement on average is 99 feet just like the posts at the Globe...but no other similarities...
  • Vitruvius & the Roman ampitheatre
    • Vitruvius's theatre plan was round
      • sound rises in orderly concentric circles from its source, so also the theatre ranges its degrees of seats in the cavea of the auditorium in a plan developed from the circle
      • the whole theatre is proportioned in imitation of that harmony which the late Hellensitic Platonists posited as the fundamental tendency of the phenomenal world...
      • while Vitruvius makes these connections between nature and art, acoustics and architecture, he describes the particular way in which a theatre is laid out according to a pattern of 4 equilateral triangles inscribed within a circle, a pattern borrowed from astrologers who used it to describe the harmony of the heavenly spheres
      • the Roman ampitheature uses only half a circle
    • What the Globe and Roman ampitheatres have in common is not so much a design tradition as the natural laws governing the transmission of sound 

  • The 'Globe' or world
    • the Elizabethans thought of their theatres as a little world, its stage cover a heaven, its cellar a purgatory
  • The body
    • book III (Vitruvius) describes the body and proportions of the circle within the body - see the homo ad quadratum image

Construction

  • built with timber from another theatre building ('The Theatre')
  • deeply influenced the design of the Fortune playhouse
  • 20 sided polygon
  • Alberti and Vitruvius both attest to the fact that round or polygonal theatres were designed this way for their acoustic qualities.

Daylight, open air

  • similar to a sports arena, some playhouses (eg. Fortune) had been used for bear baiting
  • 'anti-illusionistic' effect of the daylight auditiorium
  • unomodified by the effects of illusionistic lighting
  • interplay between stage and audience is enhanced (lighting, proximity)
  • daylight - naturalism
  • audience can more clearly see each other as well - more likely to get caught up in the crowd's gestures and emotions
  • orientation of the original Globe was 48degrees East of true North meaning that the stage was always in shade
    • this angle is also very close to the azimuth of the midsummer sunrise on this site
  • intended to use only during the Summer months
Shakespeare's Globe Rebuilt edited by JR Mulryne and Margaret Shewring (advisory editor Andrew Gurr) Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK: 1997

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