The Space
The theatre architectural structure,
if any.
Leads to technical
possibilities and limitations.
This includes
the area outside the house and performance space, if any, like
the lobby.
In
their book, Theatre and Playhouse, Richard and Helen Leacroft
offer conditions that determine the actor-audience relationships
due to and affecting theatre architecture.
- The need to see the actor's facial expression.
(sightlines and proximity.)
- The need to hear the actor speak. (acoustics)
- A large audience requires either the audience
to be raised or the actor to be raised, or both.
- The need to play to a VIP -- a chief, priest,
or king.
- Conventions regarding entrance and exits
of performers.
- The inclusion in the performance of sacred
objects.
- Scenic representation.
- The need to enclose the actors or audience
due to weather.
- The need to continue existing customs under
differing architectural conditions.
- Adaptations of existing buildings to theatrical
purposes.
- The resurrection of misunderstood conventions
and architectural forms.
- Social conditions which require one section
of an audience to be separated from another, or to enjoy additional
facilities related to status.
- New forms of lighting.
- The need to protect people from fire.
Richard and Helen Leacroft, Theatre and
Playhouse: An Illustrated Survey of Theatre Building from Ancient
Greece to the Present Day (London and New York: Methuen, 1984)
preface.
|