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Topic: Black Box play needed( Topic Closed) | |
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Shatcher
Celebrity Joined: 2/21/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 251 |
Posted: 9/28/05 at 11:55am |
A black box theatre is just what it sounds like. Pretty much it is a large empty black room. seating and staging are portable so you can set up the space any way you like. This is my faveroite type of theatre to work in because there are no limits to what you can do.
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tristanrobin
Celebrity Joined: 4/25/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 704 |
Posted: 9/28/05 at 2:02pm |
The black-box theatre is a relatively recent innovation,
consisting of a simple, somewhat unadorned performance space, usually a large square room with black walls and a flat floor. Such spaces are easily built and maintained, and are usually home to plays or other performances with very basic technical arrangements-- limited sets, simple lighting effects, and an intimate focus on the story, writing, and performances rather than technical elements. The seating is typically loose chairs on platforms, which can be easily moved or removed to allow the entire space to be adapted to the artistic elements of a production. Common floorplans include thrust, modified thrust, and arena. The black-box theatre is especially favored by colleges and other theatre training programs because the space is versatile and easy to change. Many theatre training programs will have both a large proscenium theatre, as well as a black-box theatre. Not only does this allow for two productions to be mounted simultaneously, but they can also have a large extravagant production in the mainstage while having a small experimental show in the black box. Most older black boxes were built more like television studios, with a low pipe grid overhead. Newer black boxes typically feature catwalks or tension grids. The latter providing the flexibility of the pipe grid with the accessibility of a catwalk. Black-box theatres became popular and wide spread particularly in the 1960s and 1970s, during which low cost experimental theatre was being actively practiced as never before. Since almost any warehouse or open space in any building can be transformed into a black-box (including abandoned caf?s and stores), the appeal for nonprofit and low income artists is high. The black-box is also considered by many to be a place where more "pure" theatre can be explored, with the most human and least technical elements being in focus. |
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tristanrobin
Celebrity Joined: 4/25/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 704 |
Posted: 9/28/05 at 2:03pm |
shatcher - LOL- sorry - I didn't read your answer before
responding to juliet's question. you said it so much more succinctly. LOL |
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ljstockham813
Player Joined: 3/31/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 21 |
Posted: 9/28/05 at 5:07pm |
Title: Divorce Sale Logline: A group of neighbors hold a s?ance to contact the deceased husband of a ditsy mother-in-law. Genre: Contemporary comedy. (Ideal for community theatre and dinner theatre venues.) Set: 1, double-car garage. Characters: 7 female, 3 male. (1 female and 1 male are cameo roles.) Running Length: 90 minutes. Staging: Black box or theatre in the round. Copyright ? 1994, 1993. Production History: 3 stage productions (Honiara, Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands; Dalby, Queensland, Australia; and New York City, New York), and 2 staged-readings (San Bernardino, California). Play is also in circulation through the California branches of the American Association of University Women. Publication: ProPlay, Canada. Originally published by Aran Press, Inc. (All rights reserved by the playwright, including stage performances and royalties.) Is available online at: http://www.singlelane.com/proplay/divorcesale.html
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Shatcher
Celebrity Joined: 2/21/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 251 |
Posted: 9/29/05 at 11:46am |
shatcher - LOL- sorry - I didn't read your answer before Hey no problem! Although some modern black boxes are getting pretty advanced on the tech side. Next time you are in Chicago check out the theatre on Navy Peir, (they house Chicago shspr) They have a great 3/4 thrust and some on the best theatre rigging and lighting I have ever seen in that town. |
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pauliebonn
Star Joined: 4/15/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 62 |
Posted: 10/05/05 at 1:01am |
2 plays come immediately to mind.... Waiting for Godot and American Hurrah |
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teridtiger
Star Joined: 10/24/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 69 |
Posted: 10/24/05 at 12:02pm |
I posted this on another subject page, but "Vanities" by Jack Heifner would work perfectly. If you're looking at "Vital Signs", read "Talking With..." (both by Jane Martin). My theatre is producing "Prelude to a Kiss" (Craig Lucas) black-box style. |
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ljstockham813
Player Joined: 3/31/05 Location: United States Online Status: Offline Posts: 21 |
Posted: 10/24/05 at 9:24pm |
Perfect play for black box ... or bare stage with scrims and minimum props: Title: Divorce Sale Logline: A group of neighbors hold a s?ance to contact the deceased husband of a ditsy mother-in-law. Genre: Contemporary comedy. (Ideal for community theatre and dinner theatre venues.) Set: 1, double-car garage. Characters: 7 female, 3 male. (2 are cameo roles.) Running Length: 90 minutes. Copyright ? 1994, 1993. Production History: 3 stage productions (Honiara, Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands; Dalby, Queensland, Australia; and New York City, New York), and 2 staged-readings (San Bernardino, California). Play is also in circulation through the California branches of the American Association of University Women. Publication: ProPlay, Canada. Originally published by Aran Press, Inc. (All rights reserved by the playwright, including stage performances and royalties.) Available online at but you might contact the playwright at artemis1940@hotmail.com for a copy via emai attachment. Online at: http://www.singlelane.com/proplay/divorcesale.html
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Linda Stockham
Playwright/Cultural Anthropologist |
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