Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
The safety curtain between her and the world was coming down again.
The new building had lighting by electricity and a safety curtain.
In smaller theatres, a safety curtain is not usually required.
The safety curtain may be lowered during the intermission and after the performance.
Controls for the safety curtain and other emergency measures.
A safety curtain is a curtain in theatre at the front of the stage.
Operation of the safety curtain during each performance.
A safety curtain is there in case there is a fire on stage.
Return to the old habit of flashing ads on to the safety curtain in theatres.
Early in the fire the ropes of the safety curtain burned through causing it to fall into place saving the auditorium.
The safety curtain can be combined with other safety devices, such as:
The highly decorated proscenium arch and safety curtain maintain the Chinese design influence.
Her adult admirers were protected from feeling like pedophiles by "the safety curtain of story and dialogue."
The safety curtain is sometimes referred to as an iron in British theatres, regardless of the actual construction material.
The safety curtain features a painted design of drapes, and framed in the centre is a projection screen.
The safety curtain is not intended to create an air seal but rather prevent material from falling from the stage house into the audience.
The safety curtain and the ceiling were stripped of asbestos and the stage floor completely redone.
Safety curtain: A heavy fiberglass or iron curtain located immediately behind the proscenium.
Smoke Pocket: Vertical channels against the procenium designed to contain the safety curtain.
Safety curtains in theatres.
He once tried to write a column explaining why he hated safety curtains, but he couldn't quite find the requisite 800 words.
As he disappears behind a safety curtain of blue smoke he starts to say something, but he coughs on the smoke.
In the UK, it is a requirement that a safety curtain must be fully down within the proscenium opening within 30 seconds of being released.
Through a horizontal gap in the safety curtain shines a piercing light, illuminating a solitary figure at the front, and slicing the audience in half.
Oh no it isn't It's the start of December, which can only mean one thing in the world of greasepaint and safety curtains - pantomime.