TY - BOOK AU - Curry,Jane Kathleen ED - Southeastern Theatre Conference (U.S.) ED - SETC Theatre Symposium TI - The prop's the thing: stage properties reconsidered T2 - Theatre symposium SN - 9780817384814 AV - PN2091.S8 P78 2010eb U1 - 792.025 22 PY - 2010/// CY - Tuscaloosa, AL PB - University of Alabama Press KW - Theaters KW - Stage-setting and scenery KW - Congresses KW - Stage props KW - Accessoires (Cinéma, etc.) KW - Congrès KW - PERFORMING ARTS KW - Theater KW - Stagecraft KW - bisacsh KW - fast KW - Electronic books KW - Conference papers and proceedings N1 - Selected papers from the 2009 SETC Theatre Symposium held in Winston-Salem, North Carolina; Includes bibliographical references; Through the eyes of the property director / Bland M. Wade Jr. -- "Summon up the blood" : the stylized (or sticky) stuff of violence in three plays by Sarah Kane / Christine Woodworth -- Helen's theatrical mêchanê : props and costumes in Euripides' Helen / Sarah Powers -- A cannonade of weapons : signs of transgression in the early commedia dell'arte / Kyna Hamill -- Adding some "PEP" ("proto-expressionistic props") to the Swedish stage : Strindberg's property usage and his intima teater / Christopher J. Mitchell -- Rattle away at your bin : women, community, and bin lids in Northern Irish drama / Eleanor Owicki -- Bearing witness : the noose as an iconic prop in African American theatre / Adrienne C. Macki -- Hawaiian culture propped high with meaning : the lei hoaka in Victoria Nalani Kneubuhl's Emmalehua / Stefani Overman-Tsai -- Revisiting Eva Marie Saint's white glove : on props, neurons, subtext, and empathy / Andrew Kimbrough -- From props to affordances : an ecological approach to theatrical objects / Teemu Paavolainen -- "Take up the bodies" : Shakespeare's body parts, babies, and corpses / Andrew Sofer N2 - Stage properties are an often-ignored aspect of theatrical productions, in part because their usage is meant to be seamlessly integrated into the performance instead of a focal point for the audience. However, a skillfully used prop can augment the action, just as a malfunctioning prop can destroy the illusion of the scene. The essays in "Theatre Symposium: Volume 18" approach the subject of stage props from many angles, and include examinations of props in contemporary and historical productions, explorations of the cultural significance of specific props, and arguments about the UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=420329 ER -