What's the difference between a 'dress rehearsal' and a 'technical rehearsal'? Who is in charge of the 'prompt book'? And where should you go if you're instructed 'downstage'?
Find out in this comprehensive Theatre Glossary, featuring 70+ theatre terms across five key sections:
The walkway between sections of seats in a theatre.
An oval or round building with tiers of seats arranged around a central open area used for performance.
A cloth or curtain on the stage, often painted to look like a particular scene, such as a landscape or some other background.
The non-performance areas of the stage, including the areas beside, under, or above the stage, the workshops, the dressing rooms, and the green rooms.
A walkway, usually above the stage and audience areas, providing provides access to stage equipment such as lighting.
The part of the stage nearest to the audience, usually referring to the entire front half of the stage.
A room backstage where an actor can dress and put on their make-up.
The space above the stage (out of view from the audience) used to store scenery and equipment; the flies are part of the 'fly system', which is a rigging system of ropes and pulleys that allow the crew to quickly, quietly, and safely move around equipment.
The front stage curtain (also called a house curtain, act curtain, or main drape).
The auditorium where the audience sits (also used to refer to the audience as a whole).
The narrow curtains that run stage left to stage right, masking the wings from the audience.
The area out of view from the audience.
A sunken area in front of the stage where the musicians sit and play the music for the performance.
A stage is divided into parts or areas, from the point of view of an actor standing on stage and staring out at the audience in front of them:
Explore different types of stages in this free e-learning video.
An opening through the stage floor.
The area toward the back of the stage (also refers to 'upstaging' or overshadowing another performer).
A long metal pipe that hangs above the stage or audience from which things may be hung, including stage curtains, lighting fixtures, and scenery.
The area where the technical aspects of the performance are run, including sound effects and lighting (also called the control booth or control room).
The final rehearsal(s) before a show opens. During the dress rehearsal, the actors are in full costume and make-up, all production elements are in place, and the show runs without stopping.
The electronic console used to control the lighting for the theatre.
Cosmetics such as eye shadow, foundation, and lipstick that are used by actors to paint their faces to look like their characters.
To throw an image (projection) on stage by means of light, for an optical or design effect.
A master copy of the script and/or score, containing all the actor moves and technical cues, used by the stage manager to control the performance.
All the furnishings, set dressings, and other onstage items that are used in a performance but are not scenery, electrics, or wardrobe.
There are multiple meanings for the word 'set':
The electronic console used to control the sound effects for the theatre.
Typically the first time the show is rehearsed in the place where it will be performed while using all the technical elements, such as lighting, scenery, and sound.
Explore Technical Theatre in this 4-hour on-demand professional development course!
A form of theatre developed in the early to mid-20th century in Germany as a response to the political climate. This type of theatre was meant to instruct the audience and to encourage them to consider socio-political issues and is often characterized by actors directly addressing the audience.
This form is associated with the playwright and director Bertolt Brecht.
A style of playwriting and stage presentation that stresses the emotional content of the play.
Expressionism is often characterized by:
A form of theatre that encourages audience interaction and participation as a way to explore different options for dealing with an issue, often related to a form of oppression.
Explore Forum Theatre through DT+ resources on the work of Augusto Boal.
A form of theatre where, instead of sitting in traditional seating separating them from the performance, the audience becomes part of the performance.
Immersive Theatre is characterized by:
A form of theatre that is spontaneous, where there is no script and performers do not memorize or prepare the performance ahead of time. Instead, they create the performance on the spot, often using suggestions from the audience such as places or emotions.
Get Inspired by Improv in this free professional development experience.
A dramatic form that has highly exaggerated and implausible characterization, dialogue, and situations, and focuses on exaggerated emotions.
A dramatic form that attempts to show life and society as they actually are, closely linked to Realism.
Explore Naturalism through the works of Anton Chekhov and Henrik Ibsen, the latter considered to be 'the Father of Naturalism'.
There are multiple meanings of the word 'Pantomime':
A type of theatre where physical movement is the primary method of storytelling, as opposed to relying on a text or lyrics.
Access this free webinar on Teaching Physical Theatre, led by author, academic, and director, Stephen Wangh and Double Edge's Carlos Uriona.
A form of theatre that focuses on real life, characterized by believable dialogue, common settings, and characters who are everyday people. Closely linked to Naturalism.
The act of speaking clearly: pronouncing consonants, vowels, syllables, and words distinctly.
The positions where the actors stand and move to when onstage during the performance, including where they move to when entering and exiting the stage.
Planning and arranging the movements, steps, and patterns of dancers and/or actors.
Speaking clearly through the correct use of accent, inflection, intonation, and speech-sound quality.
A dialogue scene between two people (also called a 'duet scene').
How the actors' voice varies in pitch as they reveal emotion.
To act out a character, mood, idea, or narration by gestures and bodily movement, and without making any sounds.
A speech by a single performer.
Find practical activities and examples to teach monologues in this blog.
The height or depth to which the tone of voice is raised or lowered. Actors use pitch to help them express particular emotions.
To make the voice louder so that it may be heard clearly from a distance.
A solo speech often used to convey a character's thoughts to the audience.
The way in which an actor achieves their objective, expressed using action verbs.
How loudly or softly an actor speaks, also called 'dynamics'
A series of physical and vocal exercises designed to prepare an actor for a performance.
The process of improvising all or part of a speech.
Lines spoken by the actor that are intended for the audience only. These lines are spoken in the presence of other characters who supposedly do not hear them.
A character's history.
To darken the stage suddenly, or turn off the lights to leave the stage completely dark.
One of the roles that an actor plays, or certain behaviors i.e. 'getting into character'.
'Unlock' the character of Macbeth in Shakespeare's tragedy with this free e-learning resource.
The adoption of behaviors and personality traits specific to a particular character or role that the actor is playing.
An actor or group of actors who provide commentary on the action taking place during the play (as in Ancient Greek dramas), or the group of dancers and singers in a musical who perform as a unit during the performance, and generally have little to no spoken lines.
The signal for an actor to perform an action, or the spoken or written command that the technical staff follows during a performance, such as a lighting or sound effect cue.
When the performers take their bows after a performance.
When the audience is aware of something that the character does not realize.
The imaginary, invisible 'wall' between the audience and the stage.
With a fourth wall, the audience views the character onstage, but the characters in the play are unaware of the audience. 'Breaking the fourth wall' refers to a performer being aware of the audience.
A category that tells the style or form of a play, such as tragedy or comedy.
An exercise to deepen understanding of character, where an actor sits in the 'hot seat' to answer questions while still in character.
In acting, this is the thing that a character wants.
How fast or slow the action in the story moves, or how fast or slow the performance itself moves. Pacing can apply to action within scenes, the overall speed of the play, etc.
The events that happen in a story.
The order of events for the story.
Major parts of a plot structure include:
The leading character, hero, or heroine.
The printed text of a play.
In a play, the stage directions are the printed directions to the actors and/or directors.
Stereotypical characters that represent a generic, simplified type of personality.
Examples of 'Stock Characters' in theatre include:
A scene in which actors are carefully posed, stationary, and silent, as though they are frozen in a picture.
This glossary has been adapted from A Glossary of Theatrical Terminology, written by Matteson Claus and available to customers on the Digital Theatre+ platform.
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