Title: Theatre Staging
1Theatre Staging Design
- A brief overview
- of theatre spaces and
- how performers use them
2General Terms
- Stage- the area where a performance takes place
- Set- the design of the stage for a particular
play - Audience- the area of the theatre in which the
audience sits - Backstage- the area behind a stage, which is
masked so it cannot be seen by the audience - Green Room- A room backstage where the actors
hang out when they are not onstage
3Types of Theatres There are several common
types of theatre spaces, each of which has its
own set of advantages and drawbacks when it comes
to staging a play...
4Proscenium Stage
- -Ideal for spectacle and big sets
- -Strong central focus (audience faces the -same
direction) - -Tends to result in a remote and formal feeling
5Proscenium Arch- the frame or picture box
that contains the action in may proscenium
theatres
6Apron and Wings (on a proscenium stage)
- - Apron- segment of the stage which protrudes
beyond the Proscenium Arch, often used by actors
to break the fourth wall and address the
audience - -Wings- the offstage area on either side of the
stage, masked from view
7Proscenium examples
Smaller proscenium stage with split-level set
Large proscenium stage with an arch and apron
8Thrust Stage
- -Audience sits on 3 sides, or a semicircle
- -A more intimate theatre experience, audience is
closer to the actors - -Set design challenges because large set pieces
can only be placed at the back
9Thrust examples
Greek ampitheatrepossibly the first thrust
theatre space Audience in semi-circle around
stage
Small thrust stage with audience seating on
three sides of the rectangle
10Theatre-in-the-round
- -Audience sits all around the stage
- -Provides the most intimacy (no barriers between
performers audience) - -Set design must be minimal, so as not to block
the audience's view
11Theatre-in-the-round examples
Audience is right around the actors
Very minimal set design
12Alley Stage
-Also called traverse -Audience sits on
opposite sides of the stage and action takes
place between them -Good for staging action
sequences (i.e. fights) -Minimal opportunities
for scenery
13Black Box Theatre
- -A small, intimate theatre without any permanent
stage or seating - -Space can be reconfigured into a new
seating/staging arangement for each new production
14Name the theatre types...
15And just because they are awesome...
- Images from a show I recently saw, Metamophoses
at Lookingglass Theatre. Performed in a thrust
spaceaudience sat around three sides of a
shallow pool of water with a walkway around it.
The front row audience members were given towels.
16Ok, we are done with types of theatres. Now onto
some other important theatre terms...
17Important (non-actor) people
- Director- the person whose artistic vision guides
a production of a play. The director casts the
actors, gives them blocking and direction and
also works with designers to decide the look and
feel of a production. - Designers- the theatre artists in charge of the
technical side of the production. A normal
production team consists of set, lighting,
costume, and sound designers. Depending on the
show, there might also be a music director,
choreographer, dialect coach, or others involved. - Stage Manager- the organizer of a production. In
charge of managing the design team, creating
rehearsal schedule, keeping track of actors, and
running all the technical elements of a show
during performances.
18Terms to know
- Stage Directions- directions about scenic
elements or onstage actions written by a
playwright as instructions to the director,
actors and designers - Blocking- the movements on stage assigned to the
actor by the director of the play (not written in
script) - Sight-lines- what audience-members are able to
see from where they are sitting (influenced by
what is masked from sight, what is blocked by
scenic elements, and where actors are placed on
stage)
19Writing down your blocking
- When a director tells an actor where to move
(or when an actor figures it out herself), she
will write down her blocking using the following
system.
20Blocking notation
- IMPORTANT Always write down blocking from
perspective of the actor facing the audience (not
from the audience's view).
X- cross (move from one place to another) Enter-
come onstage Exit- leave the stage SR- stage
right DSL- downstage left CS- center stage USC-
upstage center
21Write down the following blocking using proper
theatre notation.
- Come on to the stage from the back right corner,
walk over the middle of the stage then walk to
the front left corner and leave on on that side.
22Write down the following blocking using proper
theatre notation.
- Come on to the stage from the back right corner,
walk over the middle of the stage then walk to
the front left corner and leave on on that side. - Enter UR,
- X to SC,
- X DSL to exit
23THE END
- It is important for all performers to know
this terminology because it is the common jargon
(vocabulary) of everyone involved in the theatre.
- Anyone educated in theatre speaks using this
terms. - Study them so they become part of your
theatrical vocabulary too!