of 1616 showing The Globe (right) and the Bear Garden (left) The Globe was owned by actors who were also shareholders in the
Lord Chamberlain's Men. Two of the six Globe shareholders,
Richard Burbage and his brother
Cuthbert Burbage, owned double shares of the whole, or 25 per cent each; the other four men, Shakespeare, John Heminges,
Augustine Phillips, and
Thomas Pope, owned a single share, or 12.5 per cent. (Originally
William Kempe was intended to be the seventh partner, but he sold out his share to the four minority sharers, leaving them with more than the originally planned 10 per cent). These initial proportions changed over time as new sharers were added. Shakespeare's share diminished from 1/8 to 1/14 (roughly 7 per cent), over the course of his career. The Globe was built in 1599 using
timber from an earlier theatre,
The Theatre, which had been built by Richard Burbage's father,
James Burbage, in
Shoreditch in 1576. The Burbages originally had a 21-year lease of the site on which the theatre was built but owned the building outright. However, the landlord, Giles Allen, claimed that the building had become his with the expiry of the lease. On 28 December 1598, while Allen was celebrating Christmas at his country home, carpenter
Peter Street, supported by the players and their friends, dismantled The Theatre beam by beam and transported it to Street's waterfront warehouse near
Bridewell. With the onset of more favourable weather in the following spring, the material was ferried over the
Thames to reconstruct it as The Globe on some marshy gardens to the south of Maiden Lane, Southwark. While only a hundred yards from the congested shore of the Thames, the piece of land was situated close by an area of farmland and open fields. It was poorly drained and, notwithstanding its distance from the river, was liable to flooding at times of particularly high tide; a "wharf" (bank) of raised earth with timber
revetments had to be created to carry the building above the flood level. The new theatre was larger than the building it replaced, with the older timbers being reused as part of the new structure; the Globe was not merely the old Theatre newly set up at Bankside. The cost was £700. It was probably completed by the summer of 1599, possibly in time for the opening production of
Henry V and its famous reference to the performance crammed within a "wooden O".
Dover Wilson, however, defers the opening date until September 1599, taking the "wooden O" reference to be disparaging and thus unlikely to be used in the Globe's inaugural staging. He suggests that the account of
Thomas Platter, a Swiss tourist, describing a performance of
Julius Caesar witnessed on 21 September 1599, tells of the more likely first production. The first performance for which a firm record remains was
Jonson's Every Man out of His Humour—with its first scene welcoming the "gracious and kind spectators"—at the end of the year. On 29 June 1613, the Globe Theatre went up in flames during a performance of
Henry VIII. A theatrical cannon, set off during the performance, misfired, igniting the wooden beams and thatching. According to one of the few surviving documents of the event, no one was hurt except a man whose burning breeches were put out with a bottle of ale. It was rebuilt in the following year (with a
tile roof) at a cost of £1,400. It was pulled down in 1644–45 (the commonly cited document dating the act to 15 April 1644 is not reliable) to make room for
tenements. A modern reconstruction of the theatre, named "
Shakespeare's Globe", opened in 1997, with a production of
Henry V. It is an academic approximation of the original design, based on available evidence of the 1599 and 1614 buildings, and is located approximately from the site of the original theatre. ==Layout==