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Theatre Basics!

Across
The setting of the actors' positions and moves on stage and off.
the part of the stage which projects in front of the curtain.
Lighting term: switching all lights out at once, leaving the stage in complete darkness
A flat which stands behind a window or door in the set
The sides of the stage, out of sight of the audience, where actors stand before making their entrance, and where props are kept, ready to be brought onto the stage.
Towards the audience.
anything which happens on the audience side of the curtain
To make an action on stage look realistic without actually doing what you seem to be doing;
The scenery for a particular show or inidividual scene.
To hide: an actors masks another when he stands in front of him and prevents the audience from seeing him properly.
Generally, some sort of instruction to the company: a rehearsal call is an instruction to attend a rehearsal at a particular time; time calls are given just before each performance
In control of all aspects of the production.(S)he develops the concept of the production, briefs the designer and lighting designer, plots the actor's moves, rehearses the actors, etc. etc. etc..
The director's right or Prompt Side
Away from the audience
The part of the theatre in which the audience sits. Also known as the auditorium
Not a dead body in a thriller! An actor who gets an unintended and uncontrollable fit of laughter on stage is said to what?
Down
One actor taking more than one part in a play.
The list of characters in a play and the actors who play them. Also, as a verb, to allocate parts to members of a company.
Taking a bow in front of the audience at the end of a show.
A room backstage where a company relaxes before the show.
The director's left or Opposite Prompt
the space that separates a performer or performance from an audience.
To dismantle the set and remove it from the stage.
Many stage floors, usually in theatres built for dance or variety, are higher at the back than at the front, to give the audience a better view.
Half an hour before the first actors are due on stage (i.e. 35 minutes before the show begins). All actors must be in their dressing rooms.
A free-standing piece of scenery, e.g.a tree, cut out of board into the correct shape and painted.