The Space
The physical space of the performance.
Are the stage
and house enclosed?
What are the
dimensions of the acting area?
What is the shape of the performance area?
What is the
shape of the house?
What is the Shape of the Performance
Area?
The
shape of a performance area also shapes the audience area, especially
in a built theatre. It also determines focus and the degree of
scenic possibilities.
Theatre Shapes:
Proscenium.
Probably the most common shape in Western theatre is the proscenium
because of its ties to how history shaped theatre architecture
and influences that historically traveled in the theatre world.
The proscenium space places the audience facing the stage generally
in one direction. At times, the house is configured in such a
way that a patron actually faces another part of the house, such
as the box seating near the proscenium. However, once the performance
begins, in order to see the performance, the audience must turn
toward a set opening. The audience sees the performance through
a rectangular frame; consequently, the proscenium distinctly separates
performance from audience. With the proscenium, fewer patrons
are close to the performance than with other shapes, so physical
distance becomes a true factor when creating experience. The proscenium
can be either with the arch or without the arch. A proscenium
type of theatre without the arch is called the Open Proscenium.
Proscenium:
Second picture down; first picture
of the theatre interior
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Cinema. The cinema type of theatre structure is an offshoot of the proscenium. Early movie theaters were converted proscenium theatres. Usually, patrons face one direction and the screen is framed.
Conclave Cinema. IMAX theatres often have a conclave cinema structure, determined by the shape of the screen. The audience space shape, however, remains the same as in the proscenium.
Surround Cinema. Some screened facilities, like a planetarium, have the screen surrounding the audience. The audience shape, then, changes into an around where the audience members, facing each other in a circle, can see the part of the screen they are facing.
Thrust. The thrust or three-quarter stage configuration places the audience
on three sides of the performance space. Patrons seated in one
area will have a different experience than a patron seated in
a different area because each will be seeing the performance from
different perspectives. The manipulation of focus through directing
and design is a key factor in producing on the thrust stage. The
upstage area offers complex scenic possibilities, and sometimes
is an extension of the proscenium type of stage. Also, because
there is more stage area, more patrons can sit close to the performance
space.
Thrust:
Not connected to a proscenium.
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Thrust:
Connected to a proscenium.
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Arena.
The arena or the theatre-in-the-round space configuration places
the audience surrounding the performance area. More patrons can
sit close to the performance space in the arena configuration
than in any other shape. Because the arena shape can offer only
minimal scenic possibilities, there is more of a demand on the
audience to imagine the drama's locale. The space haunts us back
to primitive theatre and a natural configuration of the circle
arrangement. The configuration's demand for imagination and its
natural structure to form community has the potential to help
create a vibrant and communal experience for the patron.
Flexible.
The flexible space configuration offers the director and designer
choices for the space to configure either as thrust, proscenium,
or arena staging. This type of staging usually is found in experimental
or black-box theatres, although modern theatre designers are designing
flexible stages in a much larger space.
Music Concert Shapes:
End
Stage. The end stage prevails as the space configuration for music recitals. Because of the lack of scenic
possibilities with the end stage, few theatre productions use
it. This shape is primarily designed to meet acoustical needs, and is only a modern shape.
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