Exit Stage Right was created on 2000-08-08.
Exit...Stage Left was created on 1981-10-29.
Exit Stage Right - 2015 was released on: USA: 2 March 2015 (limited)
You're thinking Snagglepuss: "Exit, stage right."
Snagglepuss.
No, that was Snagglepuss from Hanna-Barbera saying: "Exit, stage right."
"Exit" means that a character's part has finished for the moment and they leave the stage. "Exit right" means they leave by the right side facing the stage, and "exit left" vice versa. "Enter" is just the opposite. It means the character comes on stage to enter the scene.
People can enter and the stage by walking to the far left and far right of the stage. There are also stairs that lead from the stage to the audience.
There really is no correct side to exit a stage from. Really, it's whatever the director/blocking says it is. An actor can exit stage-left or right. Although sometimes, if the situation dictates, an entrance or exit can be made through the House (audience). I recently did a production of Macbeth and we had the opening fight sequence involve macbeth's soldiers enter by charging down the aisles swords bared as they leaped into our pit and on-stage. After the battle, in the background during dialogue, we had survivors drag the dead off-stage (left and right). An exit/entrance is whatever the director wants it to be. It can be traditional (left or right) or creative (through the audience). There's no right or wrong way to do it.
A stage exit is commonly referred to as a "wings" or "backstage." The area where performers exit the stage is often called the "exit" or "backstage exit." These spaces are crucial for seamless transitions between scenes and for maintaining the flow of a performance.
Probably right after "inside" was created.
From stage of the cell cycle do cells somtimes exit?
EXIT Stage Left - 2008 Setting the Stage 1-9 was released on: USA: 25 April 2009