1
the frame or arch separating the stage from the auditorium, through which the action of a play is viewed
2
a stage that extends into the audience on three sides and is connected to the backstage area by its upstage end
3
any of the lines of sight between the spectators and the stage or playing area in a theater
4
a space for theatre in which the audience surrounds the stage. Also called "theatre in the round"
5
a theatre stage that slopes upwards, away from the audience
6
a long, low piece of stage scenery, built to simulate part of a landscape, a building, a fence, or the like
7
background device employed to cover the back and sometimes the sides of the stage and used with special lighting to create the illusion of sky, open space, or great distance at the rear of the stage setting.
8
a period of transition during which the audience can reset its mind for the next event.
9
a simple indoor performance space with plain black walls and a level floor
10
a painted curtain that hangs in the back of the stage to indicate scenery
11
theatrical device for scene changes, or shifts, by which three or more settings are constructed on a turntable around a central pivot and revolved before the audience
12
A piece of scenery used to conceal a part of the stage from the audience
13
a piece of such fabric used as a drop, border, or the like, for creating the illusion of a solid wall or backdrop under certain lighting conditions or creating a semitransparent curtain when lit from behind
14
a mobile platform that is used to support and transport movable, three-dimensional theatrical scenery on a theater stage
15
a stencil or template placed inside or in front of a light source to control the shape of the emitted light