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Theatre Terminology and Stage Directions

Theatre Terminology and Stage Directions. Ad-Lib. To improvise stage business or conversation, especially when an actor has missed or forgotten lines and other actors must supply the missing information. Amphitheater.

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Theatre Terminology and Stage Directions

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  1. Theatre Terminologyand Stage Directions

  2. Ad-Lib • To improvise stage business or conversation, especially when an actor has missed or forgotten lines and other actors must supply the missing information

  3. Amphitheater • An oval or round structure with no roof that has tiers of seats rising from the center, used for public performances of plays and other productions

  4. Apron • The section of the stage in front of the curtain

  5. Arena Theater • A stage without a proscenium arch and with seats on three or four sides, allowing close association between actors and spectators

  6. Aside • A line spoken directly to the audience

  7. Backdrop • A large piece of cloth, on which scenery is painted, that is fastened to battens and hung at the back of the stage setting • Also called a drop

  8. Backstage • The area behind the set that is not visible to the audience, including dressing rooms, the greenroom, etc.

  9. Black Box Theater • A large square room with black walls and a flat floor • seating is typically loose chairs on platforms, which can be easily moved or removed to allow the entire space to be adapted to the artistic elements of a production

  10. Blackout • Stage direction to turn off all stage lights suddenly

  11. Blocking • Movement and groupings on the stage

  12. Business • Any specific action, other than a change of location, performed on the stage, such as picking up a book or pouring tea • Used to establish atmosphere, reveal character, or explain a situation

  13. Cheat • A stage technique in which an actor who is facing sideways pivots the torso and turns the face toward the audience

  14. Closed Audition • A tryout open only to union members

  15. Cold Reading • A tryout during which an actor uses material never seen before

  16. Cross • To move from one position to another on stage

  17. Cue • The last words, action, or technical effect that immediately precedes any line or business • A stage signal

  18. Curtain Calls • The appearance of a play’s cast in response to an audience’s applause • Bows at the end of the play

  19. Cut • To stop action • To Omit

  20. Cyclorama (Cyc) • A white background curtain on which lights or other effects can be projected

  21. Dress Rehearsal • An uninterrupted rehearsal with costumes and props • The final rehearsal before the first performance

  22. Flat • A wooden frame covered with cloth used as the basic unit of structure of a box set

  23. Fly • The area above the stage where scenery is hung when not in use • A system for hanging drops • Verb: to raise or lower scenery

  24. Follow Spot • A long range lighting instrument capable of picking up or following a person moving on the stage

  25. Fourth Wall • The imaginary wall through which the audience watches the action of the play

  26. Gel • A transparent color medium placed on lighting instruments to produce different colors

  27. Gobo • A stencil placed in the gel holder of a spotlight to project a pattern

  28. Grand Drape • The curtain hung just upstage of the proscenium that opens and closes at each act or scene • Also called an act curtain

  29. Greenroom • A waiting area offstage used by actors • We use the locker rooms and area just below the steps

  30. Holding for Laughs • Waiting for an audience to quiet down after a humorous line or scene

  31. Improvisation • The impromptu portrayal of a character or a scene without any rehearsal or preparation

  32. Legs • Narrow drapes, usually hung in pairs, stage left and stage right, to mask the backstage area

  33. Monologue • A speech by a single actor

  34. Motivation • The reason behind a character’s behavior

  35. Objectives • The goal of a character; what the character wants or is striving for in a scene

  36. Off Book • Rehearsal without scripts

  37. Off Stage • Off the visible stage • Also called “off”

  38. Open Audition • Tryout open to nonunion actors

  39. Periaktoi (Prisms) • Sets made up of three flats, shaped as triangles mounted on a wheeled carriage that can be pivoted

  40. Pit • The front part of the auditorium where the orchestra might be located – often below stage level

  41. Projection • The control of the volume and quality of the voice so that it can be heard clearly by everyone in an audience

  42. Proscenium Arch • The arch opening between the stage and the auditorium

  43. Readers’ Theatre • A form of theater in which plays are read to an audience from a script and brought to life by the readers’ voices, facial expressions, and controlled movement

  44. Scrim • A drop made of fabric that seems almost opaque when lit from the front and semitransparent when lit from behind

  45. Stealing a Scene • Attracting attention from the person to whom the center of interest legitimately belongs

  46. Strike • To remove an object or objects from the stage • To take down the set

  47. Tableau • A scene presented by silent, unmoving actors • For more info, see Pageant of the Masters

  48. Thespian • An actor

  49. Understudy • A person who learns a role and who can perform it in the absence of the actor

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