- A
proscenium (Ancient Gr****: προσκήνιον, proskḗnion) is the
metaphorical vertical plane of
space in a theatre,
usually surrounded on the top and sides...
-
Rockwell West
Tower The
Manansala The
Proscenium at
Rockwell Kirov Tower Sakura Tower Lincoln Tower Lorraine Tower Proscenium Residences The
Balmori Suites (under...
- The
Proscenium is a 24-storey
office building in
Midtown Atlanta,
United States. The
Proscenium was
constructed in 2001. In
October 2012 the
Atlanta Business...
-
typically similar to the
theatre in the round, or
proscenium (though the
stage will not have a
proscenium arch. In
almost all
cases the
playing space is...
-
fullness and
stretch them tight.
Proscenium stages use a
greater variety of
drapes than
arena or
thrust stages. In
proscenium theaters,
drapes are typically...
- of the
audience to them. The most
common form
found in the West is the
proscenium stage. In this type, the
audience is
located on one side of the stage...
-
separated from the
performers by the
proscenium arch. In
proscenium theaters and amphitheaters, the
proscenium arch, like the stage, is a
permanent feature...
- concept. The
metaphor suggests a
relationship to the mise-en-scène
behind a
proscenium arch. When a
scene is set
indoors and
three of the
walls of its room are...
-
Foster (1999).
Detours and Lost Highways: A Map of Neo-Noir. New York:
Proscenium Publishers. ISBN 0-87910-288-8.
Detours and Lost Highways: A Map of Neo-Noir...
- The
apron is any part of the
stage that
extends past the
proscenium arch and into the
audience or
seating area. The
Elizabethan stage,
which was a raised...