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Friday, June 26, 2020

stage properties

Choose a prop per person and develop a scene that justifies the use of each prop.he term "theatrical property" originated to describe an object used in a stage play and similar entertainments to further the action. Technically, a prop is any object that gives the scenery, actors, or performance space specific period, place, or character.A prop weapon, such as a gun or sword, looks functional, but lacks the intentional harmfulness of the corresponding real weapon. In the theatre, prop weapons are almost always either non-operable replicas, or have safety features to ensure they are not dangerous. Breakaway objects, or stunt props, such as balsa-wood furniture, or sugar glass (mock-glassware made of crystallised sugar) whose breakage and debris look real but rarely cause injury due to their light weight and weak structure."Hero" props are the more detailed pieces intended for close inspection by the camera or audience. The hero prop may have legible writing, lights, moving parts, or other attributes or functions missing from a standard prop; a hero prop phaser from the Star Trek franchise, for example, might include a irrepressible trigger and a light-up muzzle and display panel (all of which would make the hero prop more expensive and less durable). 




Here is a DLO of the prop rules (explaining)



Here is a DLO about what does a prop maker do? (explaining) Prop makers might make anything from fake jewellery to replica weapons and moving models.

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