Respuesta :
Answer:
The answer is: Because city authorities restricted playhouses, new theaters were built outside city limits and grew to become successful
Explanation:
Authorities in London banned plays within the limits of the city in 1572. Since many Londoners were strict Protestants and Puritans, they despised the theaters and the people it attracted. On top of this, many objections escalated from the Church and the City of London Officials, as well as objections from many respectable citizens about the rise in crime, and the indecent nature of some plays, fighting and drinking, and spread of the Bubonic plague. Plays were first banned in 1572 as a measure against the plague. This prompted the construction of permanent playhouses in the outside the jurisdiction of London, which lead to The Theater, built in 1576 in Shoreditch, just outside the city of london, the second permanent theater ever built in England, and the first successful one. Many others rapidly followed, such as Curtain Theater(1577), The Rose(1587), the Swan (1595), the Globe (1599), The Fortune (1600) and the Red Bull (1604). This happened during the period of English theater between 1562 and 1642 (ban on theatrical plays by the English Parliament) known as English Renaissance Theater, and is the style of plays of William Shakespeare, Christopher Marlowe and Ben Jonson.
The way things went was because city authorities restricted playhouses, new theaters were built outside city limits and grew to be successful.
Banning of theatres in city
- London banned theatres within the city because they viewed them as immoral.
- These theatres then set up outside London where they did not have to listen to the cities.
People were then able to go to these theatres which kept growing in popularity and became very successful.
In conclusion, option C is correct.
Find out more about this playhouses at https://brainly.com/question/7805082.