scenery

scenery
   At the beginning of the modernist era, wing-and-drop settings were still common, as was the use of stock scenery. The rise of the combination system meant that many companies traveled with their own scenery specific to the show, usually realistic box sets with practical elements. For transport by railroad, scenic units had to fit through the door of a boxcar, and all professional designers knew that 5'9" measurement. Claude Bragdon, art director (set and costume design) for Walter Hampden during the 1920s, observed in his memoir More Lives Than One (1938, 200-201) that even an elaborate production would have no more than six weeks from conception to opening, and that the schedule was relentless: "The scenery must go direct from the builder to the scene-painter, and from him to the theatre. It must neither lag nor hasten at any point in the journey, on account of lack of storage space." Major developments in scenery occurred with the rise of the New Stagecraft in the 1910s, as more impressionistic European designs pioneered by Robert Edmond Jones, Lee Simonson, Jo Mielziner, Donald Oenslager, and others dominated the era between the two world wars.
   See also lighting.

The Historical Dictionary of the American Theater. .

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  • Scenery — Scen er*y, n. 1. Assemblage of scenes; the paintings and hangings representing the scenes of a play; the disposition and arrangement of the scenes in which the action of a play, poem, etc., is laid; representation of place of action or occurence …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • scenery — (n.) decoration of a theater stage, 1774, earlier scenary (1690s); see SCENE (Cf. scene) + ERY (Cf. ery). Meaning a landscape or view, a pictorial scene is from 1777 …   Etymology dictionary

  • scenery — [n] surroundings backdrop, decor, flat, flats, furnishings, furniture, landscape, mise en scène, neighborhood, properties, props, prospect, set, setting, spectacle, sphere, stage set, stage setting, terrain, view, vista; concepts 263,628 …   New thesaurus

  • scenery — ► NOUN 1) the natural features of a landscape considered in terms of their appearance. 2) the painted background used to represent a place on a stage or film set …   English terms dictionary

  • scenery — [sē′nə rē] n. pl. sceneries [< obs. scenary, scenic < LL scenarius < L scena, SCENE] 1. painted screens, backdrops, hangings, etc., used on the stage to represent places and surroundings in a play, opera, etc. 2. the general appearance… …   English World dictionary

  • scenery — noun 1 features of the countryside ADJECTIVE ▪ lovely, nice, picturesque, pretty ▪ beautiful, breathtaking, dramatic, fantastic, gorgeous …   Collocations dictionary

  • scenery — n. stage props 1) to setup scenery 2) to move, shift scenery 3) to dismantle scenery 4) stage scenery landscape 5) beautiful, majestic, picturesque; wild scenery 6) (misc.) (usu. fig.) a change of scenery * * * [ siːn(ə)rɪ] majestic picturesque …   Combinatory dictionary

  • Scenery — Mont Scenery Mont Scenery Vue depuis le mont Scenery sur l île de Saba Géographie Altitude 877 m …   Wikipédia en Français

  • scenery — [[t]si͟ːnəri[/t]] 1) N UNCOUNT The scenery in a country area is the land, water, or plants that you can see around you. ...the island s spectacular scenery... Sometimes they just drive slowly down the lane enjoying the scenery. 2) N UNCOUNT In a… …   English dictionary

  • scenery — noun 1) the beautiful scenery of the Rockies Syn: landscape, countryside, country, terrain, topography, setting, surroundings, environment; view, vista, panorama; cityscape, townscape, roofscape; riverscape, seascape, waters …   Thesaurus of popular words

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