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Topic: Travelling Stage( Topic Closed) | |
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sparf
Player Joined: 9/30/04 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 23 |
Topic: Travelling Stage Posted: 10/06/05 at 1:30am |
I've finally gotten my first directing job. I'll be directing a production of Puss in Boots, from an original script.
However, we're doing this as a travelling show, taking it to area schools. I need some idea on how to construct an easily transportable, very inexpensive curtain/proscenium setup. We'd thought of PVC but we dont' want the rickety nature of it if we can avoid it. So...thoughts? |
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That is not dead which can eternal lie / and with strange aeons even Death may die.
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Joan54
Celebrity Joined: 10/03/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 207 |
Posted: 10/06/05 at 7:56am |
My Theater Company moves several times in a season..sometimes into a nice theater and sometimes into an empty barn or open field. This is what we did last summer: The stage was made from about two dozen wooden pallets. I scrounged them from the local stone mason's yard. They are free, sturdy and can be stacked into all possible shapes and sizes. The only disadvantage is their weight. I had to borrow a truck to move each time and actually got a friend ( the same stone mason) with a boom truck to load us out of the last show and store the pallets in the barn.(Our backs had seized up) The pallets are laid out and then covered with 1/2" x 4' x 8' fiberboard ( lighter and cheaper than plywd). The fiberboard is screwed down to the pallets and holds them all together. At the back of the "stage" we framed a 2 x 4 wall with the 2 x 4's at 36" on center. Between the 2 x 4's we stretched fabric and painted our backdrops. The wall was screwed down into the stage and braced forward with knee braces. On the front left and right sides of the stage we screwed 3' x 8' pieces of plywood and stretched two more backdrops over them. This way we had a back wall to create a backstage and two "wings". The entire thing could be built in about 4 hrs and broken down even quicker. The only disadvantages were the weight of the pallets and the fact that we couldn't change backdrops. You sound as if you want to have a curtain. They are pretty tricky. There is ( by nature) a lot of fabric involved and it is heavy and expensive. If the reason for the curtain is to provide scene changes perhaps you could try rolling panels instead. Think of a folding screen ( you know like the ones the starlets get changed behind) but unfold it and put some little cross feet and castors on the bottom. These screens can be made cheaply ( just build big picture frames) and they can be covered with any type of cloth that suits the show. I made several and we seem to use them constantly to create a room, split the action on the stage and sometimes the actors even get dressed behind them. It is better to have a simple set with few moving parts than an elaborate "rickety" affair. There is nothing worse than curtains that don't open, doors that get stuck, or lights that don't come on ( we suffered through that one last summer - fortunately during curtain call not act one). If you invent a good portable proscenium and/or a way to change backdrops on a portable stage please share...I am struggling with the mechanics of that this winter. |
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"behind a thin wall of logic panic is waiting to stampede"
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casey05
Lead Joined: 6/17/05 Online Status: Offline Posts: 42 |
Posted: 10/07/05 at 4:13am |
Your proscenium set-up could be constructed from flats. Curtains could
be mounted onto wire, and you can probably come up with a simple
traveller system so that it can be manipulated offstage. Otherwise,
your curtains could be manipulated with rods by stagehands. Otherwise -
though it'd probably be pretty fiddly, you could have book flats that
would open out. Or open in. Depends what your preference would be.
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Gaafa
Celebrity Joined: 3/21/04 Location: Australia Online Status: Offline Posts: 1181 |
Posted: 10/07/05 at 11:23pm |
Following on from Casey!
As your going into various venues, you could look to set the pro arch upstage & use the apron [fore stage] to perform. Having booked flats as the teasers & as suggest, either using a wire cable or aluminium pipe head batten, mounted between, for the tormentor & the rag house tab track. which can be worked from tabulating ropes through pulleys from one side OP or PS, behind the flats. Upstage of the pro, you could set up a Cyc or flats french braced &/or with drop pin hinges. Also aluminium tube can be used to build trussed structures, as a tower on OP & PS, in place of the booked flat - teasers. If you use TV flats, the covering board or material for the flat frames, can be put on & held with velco. |
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Joe
Western Gondawandaland turn right @ Perth. Hear the light & see the sound. Toi Toi Toi Chookas {{"chook [chicken] it is"} May you always play to a full house} |
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Thespian_4_ever
Lead Joined: 9/16/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 43 |
Posted: 3/17/06 at 3:26pm |
Try "Book Flats" where 2 flats are hinged together then bent at an angle, forget the proscenium just have your actors hide behind the flats. Touring shows are really hard good luck!
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