booth$9117$ - significado y definición. Qué es booth$9117$
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Qué (quién) es booth$9117$ - definición

AREA DESIGNATED FOR THE OPERATOIN OF THEATRE OR TV TECHNICAL EQUIPMENT (LIGHTING AND SOUND)
Lighting booth; Lighting Booth; Control Booth; Technical Booth (Theatre); Control booth (theatre); Control booth (theater)

Alison Booth         
AUSTRALIAN ECONOMIST
Allison Booth; Alison Lee Booth; Alison L. Booth
Alison L. Booth is an Australian labour economist and novelist who is professor of economics at the Australian National University.
Paula Booth         
BRITISH CHEMIST
Draft:Paula Booth
Paula Jane Booth is an English chemist who holds the Daniell Chair of Chemistry at King's College London and is Head of Department. Booth was awarded a Philip Leverhulme Prize in 2003, a Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award in 2008 and an ERC Advanced grant in 2012 for her novel work on investigating the mechanisms of biological self-assembly.
Paul Gore-Booth, Baron Gore-Booth         
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  • Gore-Booth in 1968
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BRITISH DIPLOMAT (1909-1984)
Baron Gore-Booth; Paul Henry Gore-Booth; Paul Gore-Booth
Paul Henry Gore-Booth, Baron Gore-Booth (3 February 1909 – 29 June 1984) was a British diplomat. He served with distinction in HM Diplomatic Service and in retirement held the following appointments: Director, Grindlays Bank, 1969–79, United Kingdom Provident Institution, 1969–79 and Registrar of the Order of St Michael and St George, 1966–79.

Wikipedia

Control booth

The control booth, control room, lighting box, technical booth, tech booth, or just booth used by television, film or theatrical technicians is the area designated for the operation of technical equipment (lighting and sound), lighting controls and sound board. Often one or two followspots may be located in the booth as well. In a theater, it is generally an enclosed space with a large sliding window with a good view of the stage centered in the back of the house. It may be on the ground floor or at the balcony level. In a film or television production, it might be in a trailer or other space near the studio.

It is designed to allow lighting and sound operators to be able to see the performance, without being in the auditorium itself. This means that they are free to talk to their colleagues in the booth, and also the stage management team and other crew members via the communications headset. A booth that is sealed to the auditorium also allows for noisier equipment to be used, in particular computers and computer-based lighting desks, which require built-in fans in order to work properly. The downside to having a sealed booth is that it can be difficult for the sound engineer to mix without being able to hear what is happening on stage. In this situation a separate table may be set up in the house for the sound engineer.

In some smaller theatres and school halls, control booths can sometimes be found above or at the side of the stage. This allows space at the back of the auditorium for more seating, or a larger foyer area. In older theatres, this is because before the advent of thyristor dimming and compact electronic control desks, there was a limit on the distance that lighting controls could be placed away from the dimmers.

In some theatres, the control booth is divided into a suite of rooms, allowing each of the technical elements of a production its own customized space. This is especially likely to be the case where a theatre produces performances which require live sound mixing rather than just pre-recorded effects, as a sound operator needs to be able to hear the sound in the auditorium, and so not be sealed from it as a lighting operator, followspot operator or projectionist might be. In some theatres with one or more balconies, the followspots may be given their own room above the highest balcony, with the lighting booth typically lower down at the rear of the stalls or the first balcony.

In rare cases, such as low-budget theatres or ones at small or older schools, the control booth is not enclosed as its own space; rather, it is part of the seating house. This setup is almost never used because it hinders the possibility of the technician team to effectively communicate to the backstage area without disrupting the performance.