The first permanent stage seems to have been built in 1815 to a design by the then local parish priest.
The first juvenile stages seem to live on the ground below rocks and debris.
Then, as I looked, the actors and the stage seemed to disappear.
The stage seems to shrink and expand at times.
Portable, folding stages were so expensive and seemed out of our reach.
That stage seemed to last for about seven years, until the child was six, and the spirit could not be detected.
Every stage of life seems to offer a new obstacle.
That stage of human curiosity seemed to have passed.
The stage always seems to be one step ahead of what is to come.
The stage seems filled by a huge ensemble, simply because all the performers dominate the space around them.