THRUST STAGEIn theatre, a thrust stage (also known as a platform stage or open stage) is one that extends into the audience on three sides and is connected to the backstage area by its upstage end.Many of the works of Shakespeare were first performed on the thrust stage of the Globe Theatre and lend themselves to such a stage design in modern times as well.
A thrust stage is one that plays to the audience on three sides, sometimes it is called an apron stage because the definition of an apron is a part of the stage that extends past the proscenium arch - which a thrust stage does.
Because the front part of the stage, the proscenium, would 'thrust' out from the stage proper and into the audience space.
A proscenium stage is where the actor faces the whole audience on the front (downstage) of the stage. A thrust stage is where the actor is surrounded on 3 sides by the audience. Think of a proscenium stage as the people coming to the front to see the actor whereas the thrust stage is where the stage comes out into the audience.
the thrust stage has the audience on three sides so everyone would see the actors at different angle
the thrust stage has the audience on three sides so everyone would see the actors at different angle
A Thrust Stage
A thrust stage. It went out into the audience.
There are three types of stages. There is a proscenium stage, a thrust stage, and an arena stage.
trust stage came from london england
An arena stage is a theater stage surrounded or nearly surrounded by the audience and a thrust stage is a a stage that projects beyond the proscenium so that the audience sits around the projection.One side of the arena stage does not have the audience and on the trust stage every side of it is covered.
A thrust stage.