Oh, I bet there's lighting capacity in there, too. (See? Not a theater person. A person who goes to theater.)
Natter 72: We Were Unprepared for This
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I hope the email is helpful when you do read it, ita.
So I went and read it, because I'm an adult who can handle things (right???), and it said approximately zero. Mostly "he will evaluate you when you go to your appointment." But at least he has "She's disgruntled and not a drug-seeker" from a professional, so hopefully that doesn't count against me.
Black box theatres are usually smaller, and in places (like a storefront, or an old warehouse) where you wouldn't usually expect a theatre to be. There are usually some risers and a bunch of stackable chairs so that you can rearrange it in various ways, depending on the production -- you can have the audience sitting in rows facing a stage, or arrange the chairs in a circle with the play going on in the middle, or whatever. Generally fairly basic lighting and sound system, and usually lots of wires running everywhere to run all of that stuff, since it gets set up differently for each production and there's not much that you can permanently install. Generally a sort of grid thing (I forget the technical name) suspended from the ceiling, that you can attach lights to.
Oh, and I once worked on a student production in a black box theatre that was in the basement of a dorm, and there were pillars in the middle of the audience, and two on the stage, supporting the load-bearing walls of the building. We managed to find some ways to incorporate the ones on the stage into the set design, but the ones in the audience were just a pain all around.
Timelies all!
It's pretty warm here. Trying not to fall asleep.
Black box is a generic term used for theatres with flexible stage/seating arrangements. They aren't always black, even.
The plan was to make chili today, but I altered it to pumpkin chili. Smells yummy. It is a bit on the spicy side. Well, very much on the spicy side. Ooops.
Pumpkin chili! That sounds interesting.
Another hivemind question: What's the best method for getting rid of fruit flies?
What's the best method for getting rid of fruit flies?
Move and leave no forwarding address.
What's the best method for getting rid of fruit flies?
Take a tupperware (old butter tub, whatever), and put a piece of cut-up fruit in it -- apple, banana, etc. Secure plastic wrap over the top with a rubber band. Poke holes in it with toothpick. The fruit flies will get in the holes b/c they smell the fruit, but won't get out b/c they can't smell their way back out. Or possibly they don't give a crap about getting out, since they've achieved Real Actual Fruit.
Heh. I will take that under advisement, Scrappy, but first I think I'll try Tep's method.