Proscenium
The fourth wall is an invisible wall that separates the audience from the actors. It is usually at the edge of the stage, unless if the seating is on the stage for a small performance. If you "break" the fourth wall, you are interacting with the audience.
The stage wall structure contained at least three doors which lead to a leading to small structure, back stage, called the ' Tiring House '. The stage wall was covered by curtains allowing entrances from left, right and centre. The actors used this area to change their attire - hence the name 'Tiring House'. The tiring house contained the dressing rooms with access to the the prop room with connecting passage and stairways. The 'Tiring House' was a hive of activity with actors changing their attire and collecting their props.
The back wall of the stage had two or three doors on the main level. Above the back was was a balcony. The doors entered a backstage area where actors changed clothes and waited for their entrance. ,
the return.
1. It was a thrust stage: audience on three sides and a wall on the fourth. 2. There were two doors in the wall for characters to enter and exit. 3. There was a small room in the wall between the doors which was covered with a drape, called the "concealment space". This could serve as the space where Polonius spies on Hamlet in Hamlet for example. 4. There was a balcony half-way up the wall, which could be used for Juliet's balcony in Romeo and Juliet or the walls of Harfleur in Henry V. 5. There was a trapdoor in the floor. This was useful for making the witches in Macbeth disappear, for example. 6. At the Globe, Curtain, Theatre and Rose, there was a roof over the stage, with a trapdoor in it. Jupiter comes down out of this trapdoor in Cymbeline. 7. The roof was held up by two giant pillars. They could serve as the trees Orlando posts his poetry on in As You Like It. 8. At the Blackfriars, the stage lighting was provided by candlabras placed on the stage. Intermissions were necessary to trim the candles. 9. The back wall was not painted or decorated to suggest the setting of the scene in any way. 10. Onstage props had to stay onstage or be moved into the concealment space, because there were no wings.
An auditorium is a large room that has been specifically designed to house a large number of people for the purpose of watching a performance. The average auditorium wall height is 50 ft.
because curtains have vacum
Another name for the walls of ventricles is the Purkinje fibers.
septate
A projector.
septum
Parietal
The fourth wall is an invisible wall that separates the audience from the actors. It is usually at the edge of the stage, unless if the seating is on the stage for a small performance. If you "break" the fourth wall, you are interacting with the audience.
the septum
The Atrial septum The wall between the two atriums is called the septum. Septum Cardiac Septum Atrial septum, containing the foramen ovale. Actually its called the interatrial septum...
it was dividing east berlin and west berlin
the septum