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Definition of Stage crew
1. Noun. Crew of workers who move scenery or handle properties in a theatrical production.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Stage Crew
Literary usage of Stage crew
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Play Production in America by Arthur Edwin Krows (1916)
"LIGHTING AND "EFFECTS" ARE "WORKED" BY THE stage crew CHAPTER XXV LIGHTING DEVICES
FOR Edison's invention of the electric light, Brander Matthews holds him ..."
2. Play Production in America by Arthur Edwin Krows (1916)
"LIGHTING AND "EFFECTS" ARE "WORKED" BY THE stage crew CHAPTER XXV LIGHTING DEVICES
FOR Edison's invention of the electric light, Brander Matthews holds him ..."
3. The Vaudeville Theatre, Building, Operation, Management by Edward Renton (1918)
"He should be made to feel this responsibility keenly and no carelessness on his
part should be for a moment tolerated. STAGE EMPLOYEES THE stage crew This ..."
4. The Popular Theatre by George Jean Nathan (1918)
"Thus, the voice of the stage crew is the voice of the American people. Three days
before Mr. Augustus Thomas' " The ..."
5. How Motion Pictures are Made by Homer Croy (1918)
"Since the picture had been taken by a camera lashed on the pilot of an engine,
the audience, with its emotions heightened by the industrious off-stage crew ..."
6. Producing in Little Theaters by Clarence Stratton (1921)
"Learn whether the dress rehearsal will require a union stage crew. Be clearly
informed upon the relation between union stage hands and union musicians. ..."