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The Globe was an open-air theater featuring stadium seating. While the seats are covered, the top of the theater is open much like in a modern sporting arena; in Shakespeare's time, plays were lit by sunlight. As a result, plays had to take place during the daytime, usually at high noon and only during good weather.

Commoners would often wear fabrics made of wool, sheepskin, linen, or taffeta. Peasant men wore loose-fitting trousers, trunks, cloaks, and hose much like the noblemen, but their items were very plain in color, cut, and fabric.

The Theatre was among the first playhouses in England since Roman times. Like the many other playhouses that followed, it was a multi-sided structure with a central, uncovered "yard" surrounded by three tiers of covered seating and a bare, raised stage at one end of the yard.

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Answer:

The Globe was an open-air theater featuring stadium seating. While the seats are covered, the top of the theater is open much like in a modern sporting arena; in Shakespeare's time, plays were lit by sunlight. As a result, plays had to take place during the daytime, usually at high noon and only during good weather. In Shakespeare's time all actors were male. As with the men, women's costumes were usually ordinary clothes that reflected the social status of the character the actor was playing. They also wore wigs which, by their color and styles, showed the age and status of their character.

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