A thrust stage is commonly used in presenting plays and is defined by the fact that the audience is seated around the stage area but still allowing for a backstage area.

The Webb Theater of St. Norbit College
http://www.snc.edu/performingarts/images/webb.jpg
The purpose of the design of the thrust stage was is to make the drama being perfomed more three dimensional. Actors come out almost into the audience and the action takes place between them. Sight lines are normally better with a thrust stage as the theater need not have as many rows stacked behind one another to have the same number of people in the theater.
The design also gives theaters the advantage of being just a few feet away from their audience (again improving sight lines) and also giving the action a more realistic feel. This advantage still allows the same number of seats to be sold as well as still providing a backstage area and a vomitory for entrances and exits, allowing more places for a character to join the action on the stage.
Some of the first theaters were designed in this fashion such as the theater of Epidaurus in Greece which can be traced back to the 4th century BC. ![]()
The Theater of Epidaurus is recognized as an acoustic marvel as the individual in the center of the stage of this picture can be heard by audience members in the very top rows.
Thrust stage theatres
North America
Europe
Information provided by: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thrust_stage
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