Stage Types
Parts of a Set
Design Elements
Hanging Parts
Just for fun!
100

Audience on one side, the stage we have here

Proscenium

100

Adds height to the stage, able to be walked on

Platforms

100

Typically the first thing you notice. Combinations can imply relationships and mindsets. (Contrasting, complimentary)

Color

100

The front, main curtain

Grand

100

The first actor

Thespis

200

Audience on three sides

Thrust Stage

200

Typically builds walls. Able to add windows and doors.

Flats

200

Qualities of smoothness or roughness, variation of materials, patterns, colors

Texture

200

The curtains that hang from the sides, make up the wings

Legs

200

A purge of emotions for the characters or audience

Catharsis

300

Audience on all sides

Arena Stage

300

Three-sided set piece, each side can be painted for different scenes

Periaktoi

300

Helps to define the edges of masses on the stage and to create feelings of movement or distance

Line

300

A back curtain usually used for lighting effects

Cyc

300

Writer of musicals such as Hamilton, In the Heights, and music for Encanto

Lin-Manuel Miranda

400

A space that you can arrange however you wish

Black Box

400

Platforms with wheels, typically have set pieces on top

Wagons

400

How the scenic elements and the open space between them are arranged within height, width, depth of the stage space

Composition

400

A curtain that the audience can see through if lit from behind

Scrim

400

Some argue that its function is to chase away mischievous spirits; others insist it is for the ghosts that are said to inhabit virtually every theatre, keeping them happy and contented.

Ghost Light

500

Performing in a space that isn't typically a theatre space

Found space

500

A set that's built as if it's one room, typically has tree walls.

Box set

500

Size of scenic elements on the stage, the amount of space they occupy

Mass

500

The pipes that curtains and set pieces can hang on

Battens

500

The Scottish play that supposedly brings bad luck if you say it by name in a theatre during a show or rehearsal

Macbeth

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