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Depending on several factors, an aside or a soliloquy.

Typically, an aside is a short comment made directly to the audience. Think of saying something under one's breath.

A soliloquy is the character's train of thought spoken aloud for the audience to hear, but inaudible to other characters.

So, based on the word 'remark' in your question, aside is probably the term you want.

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Q: What is a remark made by actor to the audience that the other actors are not supposed to hear?
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Related questions

What is a remark made by an actor to the audience?

a remark made by an actor to the audience that other actors don't hear is called aside


What is a remark that is delivered by an actor to the audience that is not heard by other actors on the stage?

That is called an aside.


What is the actor's remark to the audience?

An ASIDE.


What is a remark that is made by an actor in the audience?

An 'aside'.


Remark made by an actor to the audience that the other actors are not supposed to hear?

This is usually referred to in the script as an aside. Asides take place in particular styles of drama, and are not something you'd get in naturalism for example where an aside would be 'breaking the imaginary fourth wall' and reminding the audience they are watching a play.


If an actor talks to the audience What is it called?

If an actor speaks directly to the audience it is called an aside. If an actor speaks to himself, while only the audience can hear, it is called soliloquy. The fourth wall is a hypothetical barrier between the actors and the audience. This barrier is broken when an actor interacts with the audience through an aside.


What is it called when an actor says his thoughts allowed to the audience?

A short remark unheard by the other characters is called an aside. A monologue unheard by the other characters is a soliloquy.


What advantages and disadvantages are there to the use of a traverse stage?

Traverse Stage Advantages for the audience: ---Intimacy between the audience and actors. ---The audience can see the actor's entire body and hear the actors clearly. Advantages for the actors: ---Intimacy between the audience and actors. ---Scenery can be placed on the back wall. Disadvantages for the audience: ---Once an actor walks past one part of the audience, the actor's back will be to the audience. ---It's not really convenient to place scenery on the stage. So, very minimal and small pieces of scenery can be placed on the stage. Disadvantages for the actors: ---Very minimal and small pieces of scenery can be placed on the stage. ---Traverse stages are usually high off the ground. So, the front row audience might not be able to see very well.


What is a short speech delivered by an actor in a play which expresses the actor's thoughts It is usually directed to the audience and not heard by other actors?

no one knows


Is shall you her more or shall you speak at this is it a aside in romeo and Juliet?

The correct quotation is "Shall I hear more, or shall I speak at this?" "Shall I hear more" does not mean the same thing as "shall you hear more" Probably the best way to define an aside is a line said by a character which is unheard by anyone else on stage, but is heard by the audience. By this definition, the remark is an aside: Romeo says it but Juliet doesn't hear it. The Wikipedia definition of aside as a remark addressed to the audience is unhelpful, as it is unclear whether the remark is to be addressed to the audience or whether he is addressing himself. It depends on how the actor is directed.


What term describes what an actor breaks when he addresses the audience directly from stage?

It's called "breaking the fourth wall" and refers to a convention which evolved in the nineteenth century. The idea was that the actors were to behave as if they were in a room with four walls, three of which are the walls of the set of the proscenium stage and the fourth of which is a kind of one-way glass between the actors and the audience: the audience can see through it, but the actors can't, and so are not supposed to acknowledge the existence of the audience in any way. If someone on stage does acknowledge the audience, it's called breaking the fourth wall. The actor does not have to speak to the audience: it is sufficient if he looks at the audience and winks or makes some other sign that he sees them.Of course, not all drama uses the fourth wall convention. A lot of plays both old and new don't.


What is the opposite of actors?

actress