backcloth$6454$ - определение. Что такое backcloth$6454$
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Что (кто) такое backcloth$6454$ - определение

FLAT PIECE OF THEATRICAL SCENERY
Backcloth; Backcloths; Back cloth; Back cloths; Back-cloth; Back-cloths; Theatrical Flat; Coulisse; Flats (theatre)
  • A scenic painter at work at the Semperoper in Dresden, Germany.
  • Theater flats under construction.

Flat (theatre)         
A flat (short for scenery flat) or coulisse is a flat piece of theatrical scenery which is painted and positioned on stage so as to give the appearance of buildings or other background.
backcloth         
(backcloths)
1.
A backcloth is a large piece of cloth, often with scenery or buildings painted on it, that is hung at the back of a stage while a play is being performed. (BRIT; in AM, use backdrop
)
= backdrop
N-COUNT
2.
The backcloth to an event is the general situation in which it happens. (BRIT JOURNALISM or LITERARY)
I'm not impressed by the promise of tax cuts against the backcloth of a public-spending deficit.
= background
N-SING: with supp, oft N of n
coulisse         
[ku:'li:s]
¦ noun a flat piece of scenery at the side of the stage in a theatre.
?(the coulisses) the wings.
Origin
C19: Fr., feminine of coulis 'sliding'.

Википедия

Flat (theatre)

A flat (short for scenery flat) or coulisse is a flat piece of theatrical scenery which is painted and positioned on stage so as to give the appearance of buildings or other background.

Flats can be soft covered (covered with cloth such as muslin) or hard covered (covered with decorative plywood such as luan). Soft-covered flats have changed little from their origin in the Italian Renaissance. Flats with a frame that places the width of the lumber parallel to the face are called "Broadway" or "stage" flats. Hard-covered flats with a frame that is perpendicular to the paint surface are referred to as "Hollywood" or "studio" flats.

Usually flats are built in standard sizes of 8 feet (2.4 m), 10 feet (3.0 m), or 12 feet (3.7 m) tall so that walls or other scenery may easily be constructed, and so that flats may be stored and reused for subsequent productions.

Often affixed to battens flown in from the fly tower or loft for the scenes in which they are used, they may also be stored at the sides of the stage, called wings, and braced to the floor when in use for an entire performance.