Active TopicsActive Topics  Display List of Forum MembersMemberlist  CalendarCalendar  Search The ForumSearch  HelpHelp
  RegisterRegister  LoginLogin
Closed Topics (Forum Locked Forum Locked)
 Community Theater Green Room Discussion Board :Archives :Closed Topics
Message Icon Topic: Green Room(Topic Closed Topic Closed) Post Reply Post New Topic
Author Message
Sue Mumby
Guest
Guest

bullet Topic: Green Room
    Posted: 2/25/05 at 10:55pm
Can anyone tell me please, where the term Green Room originated?
IP IP Logged
Mike Polo
Admin Group
Admin Group
Avatar
Community Theater Green Room

Joined: 2/01/04
Location: United States
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 286
bullet Posted: 2/26/05 at 6:52am
Check the thread "History of the name Green Room" under this same topic.
Mike Polo
Community Theater Green Room
http://www.communitytheater.org
IP IP Logged
Russell W
Player
Player
Avatar

Joined: 3/27/05
Location: Australia
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 0
bullet Posted: 6/25/05 at 6:31pm

Hi Sue,

From the number of readings to your question, I'd say you raised an interest in a subject dear to many.  If you'd asked: Why are we Thespians; or, why a Bio-box, the answer might have been easier.  Here is what I managed to gather...

Why a ? Green Room?

Not so easy, this one.  Why do we always call the dressing room the Green Room when it isn't even green?  A typical reply: "No one knows for sure."  Theatre artists undoubtedly will continue to honor the tradition of the green room, despite their general ignorance of its history.  The most plausible reason seems to be documented in:

  • The first recorded use is in a play by Thomas Shadwell called The True Widow, first performed at Dorset Garden Theatre in London in December, 1678:
  • "No, Madam: Selfish, this evening, in a green room, behind the scenes, was before-hand with me.".

    The usage here might suggest it was just a green-painted room; but, a slightly later example, in a book called Love Makes Man, written by the actor and dramatist Colley Cibber and published in 1701 makes the usage clear:

    "I do know London pretty well, and the side-box, Sir, and behind the scenes; ay, and the green-room, and all the girls and women actresses there...".

    Colley Cibber was closely associated with a different theatre, the Drury Lane.

Some other reasons (guesses) put forward over time have been:

  • It dates back to days when theatre was often outdoors, in Elizabethan days and earlier.  You went out onto the green to perform.  Or; the Green Room was just a canvassed area on the green grass adjacent to the portable stage at village fairs, or whatever.
  • Originally such rooms were painted green to relieve the eyes from the glare of the stage.  This whole line of inquiry, however, is mooted by the fact that the term 'Green Room' is of seventeenth-century provenance.  Actors left the Green Rooms of that day to enter stages illuminated by candles, or oil lamps.  The intensity of stage lighting in the seventeenth century was considerably less than that of the twentieth, or even the soft glow of nineteenth-century gaslight, so the attendant effect on actors' eyes was correspondingly less injurious.  Although it cannot be denied that, as a colour, green is generally restful to the eyes, there surely is no connection between the choice of that colour and the glare of stage lights.
  • The green in Green Room is derived partially from the American slang term 'greenbacks' (translation: money).  The Green Room is where the actors got their money for performing.
  • There are two reasons for the Green Room being so called:
  • 1.  Extras and minor actors didn't have their own dressing room, hence were green with jealousy at the stars for having their privacy; and

    2.  Extras and minor characters were new (hence, green) to theatre and shared a common room.

What is clear from the early citations is that the usage of the term Green Room was not limited to a single theatre; but otherwise, its origins are obscure.

[Let me make one thing clear.  This summary is just a collection of realistic and not so realistic reasons given in answer to your question by others over the years,  I have simply consolidated them here -- it is not all my own work.]

Like a lot of terms in theatre, there is a certain mistique, and I'd encourage their perpetuation.

Cheers from Oz.

 

"Without music, the soul is silent.
Without education, the world is dark."
-- Melia Peavey, 1997
(Director, Peavey Electronics Corporation)
IP IP Logged
casey05
Lead
Lead
Avatar

Joined: 6/17/05
Online Status: Offline
Posts: 42
bullet Posted: 6/28/05 at 4:09am
There's also another theory that the stage was originally called the "green" and that is why the green room is called the green room. 
IP IP Logged
Post Reply Post New Topic
Printable version Printable version

Forum Jump
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot create polls in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum

Bulletin Board Software by Web Wiz Forums version 8.05
Copyright ©2001-2006 Web Wiz Guide
buy generic cialis are in line cialis canada outcome for yourself viagra sales cost saving benefit viagra uk convert your buy phentermine online pay phentermine cod payment Lenders Everything xanax online your existing xanax overnight absolute must free incest stories online The value gay incest advance The key free dog sex pics cash flow dog sex the reduced noise free gay college guys of the period gay guys