How I imagine them to look like
Snape gang 💚💚💚💚💙💛
seen from Türkiye
seen from Azerbaijan
seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from India

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from France
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Israel

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Brunei
seen from South Korea
seen from Canada

seen from United States
seen from Thailand
How I imagine them to look like
Snape gang 💚💚💚💚💙💛
Charity: Oh, fiddlesticks.
Severus: Look, I understand this is a tense situation, but let's watch the fucking language
Burbage, Peak District
The invention of the modern theatre during the reign of Elizabeth I; ‘The Red Lion,’ the first permanent theatre built in London in 1567 fol
RICHARD BURBAGE (lead actor and shareholder in the Lord Chamberlain’s Men): Well, the thing you have to remember is that 1599 was like the worst ye...
CONDELL: It played, but it was hokey. Whenever the Ghost was all, “Revenge his foul and most unnatural murther,” Burbage would crack up. He couldn’t stay in character.
BURBAGE: “Murther!” (chuckles)
SHAKESPEARE: I guess I felt like if people were coming for murther, you had to give them murther.
Lost London: The Theatre
In 1572 the Mayor and Corporation of London banned all plays, as a means of dissuading strangers from gathering in crowds and thus spreading plague. Whilst this may seem similar to the social distancing measures and closure of many arts venues in 2020, things went a step further in 1575, when all players were formally banned from the City. This led to the construction of theatres outside of the jurisdiction of London, with building of the very first permanent theatre, and therefore recipient of the definitive article, starting in Shoreditch in 1576 by James Burbage.
No complete records of The Theatre’s appearance survive, though it is known to have been a timber frame with a tiled roof, be polygonal in its footprint (probably an octagon), and had three galleries surrounding an open yard and a thrust stage. For the price of a penny, attendees would have watched plays standing in the yard, whilst extra pennies would allow admittance to the galleries, and the option of a stool for sitting down.
The Theatre played host to a number of acting companies, including Leicester’s Men, of which James Burbage was a member, followed by the Admiral’s Men, to which James’s son Richard belonged, and later the Lord Chamberlain’s Men, for whom Richard Burbage was the lead actor, and also had in their employ one William Shakespeare as poet, playwright and actor. Many of Shakespeare’s earlier plays had their début at The Theatre.
This first permanent playhouse was not to last long; in 1598, following a dispute with the landlord, The Theatre was dismantled. Its timbers were ferried over the Thames, where they were used in the construction of the first iteration of the Globe, on a site around 230 m from the current modern reconstruction. The site of The Theatre was for many years marked simply by two plaques on Curtain Road in Shoreditch, though recently The Theatre Courtyard Gallery has been built on the site, and will house an exhibition of Shakespearean and Elizabethan artefacts, including those found from archaeological investigations, and there will also be part of The Theatre’s foundations on show.
Professor Charity "I do not believe phone do not work at Hogwarts.. I was so excited to show the students" Burbage
Taken by Sybil "oh, Charity, why would you need to call anyone, if you can just... Predict what they want to tell you" Trelawney in 1994
*disclaimer... I know there were not iPhones® back in 1994 but mobile phones had already existed 😏*