The major characters interact further downstage, perhaps even on the small forestage, with the party serving as a background to them. |
|
The formerly semicircular forestage that connected the audience to the actors became a straight and narrow apron that divided the two groups. |
|
Successive restructuring had expanded audience capacity, cut off the forestage and pushed the actors behind the proscenium. |
|
The stage was connected through an adjustable forestage with an arena surrounded by a horseshoe of seating. |
|
Indoors, we can notice 6 forestage boxes and an orchestra pit that can contain 70 musicians. |
|
Accordingly, his designer, Angela Davies, has added a forestage where Buckingham, Queen Katherine and Wolsey can lament their fall from grace. |
|
In the Restoration theatre, the proscenium was merely the frame that masked the stage curtain, separating the scene from the platform, or forestage. |
|
The apron a forestage in front of the curtain onto which players marched, struck a pose, and took up their stances for lengthy soliloquies became less prominent with the new, natural style of acting. |
|
Adam Miecielica, the set designer, hangs multicolored garlands of flowers from a rustic frame of entwined branches in the background while scattering a few logs around the grassy forestage. |
|
A restored rococo fan that was previously used to push organ music toward the audience now functions as an acoustical reflector above the forestage. |
|