Stage Directions
Ground Plans
Types of Curtains
Parts of the Theater
Scenery and Painting
100

A

Stage Right

100

On a ground plan everything is viewed from this perspective.

Above/bird's eye view

100

The fancy curtain at the front of the stage that we can open and close to hide the stage from the audience

The Main Curtain, main rag, grand drape

100

The lowered area in front of the stage where musicians play

Orchestra pit

100

A fake wall that is part of a set

Flat

200

B

Upstage

200

Because a ground plan is in scale and is a map for us to build/place a set, it is important that it has this information. 

Dimensions/Measurements

200

The curtains that hang vertically from the top to the floor and hide the wings

Legs

200

The architectural arch (wall) that frames the stage

Proscenium

200

A piece of the fake floor of a set, that is raised up off the stage.

Platform

300

C

Downstage

300

On a ground plan, this represents


A door

300

The curtains that hang across the stage (horizontally), up high to hide cable, bars, and other things from the audience

Borders

300

The part of the stage in front of the proscenium

Apron

300

The people who paint the scenery once the carpenters are done building it are called this. 

Scenic Artists

400

D

Stage Left

400

On a ground plan, a chair would look like this shape. 

Square/rectangle

400

A painted curtain that hangs upstage and has a scene on it is called this. 

Backdrop or drop.
400

The space just out of view of the audience where the actors/scenic pieces, etc wait to go onstage

Wings

400

The scenery department is responsible for create all of the elements that make up the physical space we are in but NOT the props. This is an example of a real world thing that would be considered scenery. 

Wall, floor, door, window, stairs, etc. 

500

E

Center Stage

500

When we draw curtains on a ground plan, they typically look like this.

A wavy/squiggly line. 

500

The big white curtain all the way upstage that we bounce lights off of for a backdrop

Cyclorama or Cyc

500

The room at the back of the theater where the lighting board is and the stage manager is during the show. 

The booth

500

Before building a set, a designer will create a front view picture of it, so that everyone can see what it looks like. We call it this.

Rendering