Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. Your ticket says; curtain up at 7.30. Cast and crew involved in the first scene receive a call at "the half", which is when?
2. The audience are also advised as to how long there is to go before curtain up. What term is used to describe these announcements?
3. Theatre folk live by the maxim "the show must go on", but occasionally illness (such as a sore throat or injury sustained while dancing) means that a principal performer is unable to appear. What do we call the artiste taking the place of their indisposed colleague?
4. Backstage, everything is ready, and clearance can be given to allow the audience in. What phrase is used?
5. These days done via a backstage sound system, artistes were once summoned to the stage by a knock on their dressing room door. What was the title of the person who did this job?
6. To ensure all sound, lighting, and scenery cues are executed correctly, the show is "called". In a UK theatre, who does this?
7. It doesn't happen often, but, once in a while, a performer may "dry", and forget their lines. Who is there to save their bacon and allow the action to continue?
8. Theatres of traditional design (stage with curtains and a proscenium arch) are obliged by most UK licensing bodies to lower a safety curtain in the presence of every audience. What word is used amongst technical staff to describe this curtain?
9. Stage Left and Stage Right apply from an audience perspective as viewed from your seat.
10. You are watching a scene set in a drawing room, and a performer crosses to a side table and switches on a lamp, which actually comes on. What term is used for this type of prop?
11. At the end of a show´s run, the set and props must be dismantled. What word describes this process?
12. Where at the theatre would you find the marquee?
13. According to theatrical jargon, what euphemism does a performer use to refer to being out of work?
14. Is it the done thing to say "Good luck" to a performer before they take to the stage?
15. Let´s bring the curtain down on this quiz with a really tough one. In days gone by, fish & chips were often brought backstage by performers as their evening meal. This had to be done secretly, as one wasn´t supposed to bring them into a theatre. Why?
Source: Author
simjazzbeer
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stuthehistoryguy before going online.
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