Observing the audience helps you understand the relationship between the audience and performers because, the way the people react to the actors shows their respect for them.
Performer/Audience Relationship (or the Actor/Audience Relationship,)
A spiritual dance performed by a community.
We do not have as much information about street theatre as we do about performances in playhouses, probably because there was very little of it. Performers without a patron were subject to imprisonment, and performers with a patron wanted to have a paying audience, thank you very much.
In theater, a thrust stage (also known as a platform stage or open stage [1]) is one that extends into the audience on three sides and is connected to the backstage area by its up stage end. A thrust has the benefit of greater intimacy between performers and the audience than a proscenium, while retaining the utility of a backstage area. Entrances onto a thrust are most readily made from backstage, although some theatres provide for performers to enter through the audience using vomitory entrances.
...the immediate, personal exchange and chemistry between audience and performers.(theatre the lively art: wilson, goldfarb)
* Performers * An audience or spectators * Something that is experienced
It's a biography (:
Performer/Audience Relationship (or the Actor/Audience Relationship,)
To understand what infotmation will best persuade you audience
n. The appearance of performers or a performer at the end of a performance to receive applause from the audience.
Technical writers perform audience analyses to better understand the demographics of their intended target audience. This helps them write in a manner that the intended audience will be able to understand.
The word is "fourth wall". It refers to the imaginary barrier between the performers and the audience in a theatrical production.
"the faculty of observing in any given case the available means of persuasion." To break that down, pretty much the capability of being able to recognize your audience in any situation and being able to understand who the audience is and what state of mind they are in so the speaker knows what words to use and how to form the words.
The cast of Monterey Pop - 1968 includes: Jefferson Airplane as Themselves Peter Albin as Performers Sam Andrew as Performers The Animals as Themselves Marty Balin as Performers Bruce Barthol as Performers Vic Briggs as Performers Big Brother and the Holding Company as Themselves Eric Burdon as Performers Jack Casady as Performers Roger Daltrey as Performers Denny Doherty as Performers Micky Dolenz as Himself - Audience Member Spencer Dryden as Performers John Entwistle as Performers Art Garfunkel as Performers Dave Getz as Performers James Gurley as Performers Canned Heat as Themselves Jimi Hendrix as Performer Chicken Hirsh as Performers Bob Hite as Performers Barry Jenkins as Performers Country Joe and the Fish as Themselves Country Joe McDonald as Performers Brian Jones as himself Janis Joplin as Performer Paul Kantner as Performers Jorma Kaukonen as Performers The Mamas and the Papas as Themselves Hugh Masekela as Performer Danny McCulloch as Performers Scott McKenzie as Performer Barry Melton as Performers John Mitchell as Performer, with Jimi Hendrix Keith Moon as Performers Laura Nyro as Performer Michelle Phillips as Performers Otis Redding as Performer Noel Redding as Performer, with Jimi Hendrix Johnny Rivers as Performer Ravi Shankar as Performer Paul Simon as Performers Grace Slick as Performer, with Jefferson Airplane Tom Smothers as himself Pete Townshend as Performers Henry Vestine as Performers Carol Wayne as Herself - Audience Member John Weider as Performers The Who as Themselves
A spiritual dance performed by a community.
The actors with the audience.
-apexHow much the audience knows about the subject