Downstage Right, Downstage Center, Downstage Left, Upstage Right, Upstage Center, Upstage Left
downstage: downstage left, downstage center, and downstage right center stage: center left, center stage, and center right upstage: upstage left, upstage center, and upstage right
your mom is downstairs
Currently, stages are flat and the audience area has raised tiers (the seats closest to the stage are lowest, then there is a higher row, and so on. It used to be that the audience area was flat (it might be a field where people just sat on the ground), and the stage sloped upwards towards the back. Downstage is literally towards the audience. Actors, set pieces, or props could be placed downstage (near the audience) initially or can move downstage (move towards the audience from a position more towards the back of the stage). The term "upstage" can mean to take the focus away from someone. If an actor is speaking to another actor on stage, and the first actor is downstage of the second one, the first actor has to turn her or his back to the audience to address the person "upstage" of them. So, when you "upstage" someone, you are taking attention away from them.
I know that center stage is in the middle! and i believe up stage is to the front near the audience and i do not remember there being a "downstage" backstage maybe?
Downstage Right, Downstage Center, Downstage Left, Upstage Right, Upstage Center, Upstage Left
First arabesque means that the downstage leg is up and the downstage arm is back while the upstage arm is front.
center left center right upstage right upstage left downsatge left downstage right centeral
downstage: downstage left, downstage center, and downstage right center stage: center left, center stage, and center right upstage: upstage left, upstage center, and upstage right
your mom is downstairs
First arabesque means that the downstage leg is up and the downstage arm is back while the upstage arm is front.
to move from one side of the stage to the other, especially by passing downstage of another actor
Currently, stages are flat and the audience area has raised tiers (the seats closest to the stage are lowest, then there is a higher row, and so on. It used to be that the audience area was flat (it might be a field where people just sat on the ground), and the stage sloped upwards towards the back. Downstage is literally towards the audience. Actors, set pieces, or props could be placed downstage (near the audience) initially or can move downstage (move towards the audience from a position more towards the back of the stage). The term "upstage" can mean to take the focus away from someone. If an actor is speaking to another actor on stage, and the first actor is downstage of the second one, the first actor has to turn her or his back to the audience to address the person "upstage" of them. So, when you "upstage" someone, you are taking attention away from them.
I know that center stage is in the middle! and i believe up stage is to the front near the audience and i do not remember there being a "downstage" backstage maybe?
Drama
they are called such because in the beginnings of modern theater, stages used to be built on a slant, so upstage was literally "up the stage"
pace in drama means tempo