Each summer there is a queue of classical concerts that occur here called 'Notti Romane al Teatro di Marcello'. The theatre was used for dramas and field fights and was a predecessor to the Colosseum. Today, it offers a sublime setting to listen to concerts by universally perceived artists in several musical genres including jazz and classical. Private apartments have been worked on the theater and great concerts are still held in the drastically lit up surroundings in the summer months. Leaving the archeological region, you wind up on the wide Via del Portico d'Ottavia, the central avenue of the old Jewish Ghetto. Today when you take a gander at the Teatro di Marcello, you can see the high arches of the antiquated theater, archaic braced walls and the more rich additions of Baldassare Peruzzi, who embraced the conversion to a Renaissance palazzo. You can't usually get inside the structure unless you're adequately fortunate to know a resident. Be that as it may, the archeological region around the base is usually open (free) in sunlight hours. You can stroll past the extraordinary arches, by scattered archeological finds, to the Portico of Octavia.