WordNet
n. a stage in a theater on which actors can perform [syn: theatre stage]
Usage examples of "theater stage".
I can work up close in a small room or on the street, on a cabaret or theater stage, and I'm available for birthdays, charivaris, menarches, and bar mitzvahs.
At last, his cheeks flushed, breathing hard, he came down the steps at the side of the mock-theater stage and walked directly up to Chubby Bosanquet, completely ignoring June Lassiter.
He tried to make the world a theater stage, with himself as director.
As if to a cue on the theater stage, the drawing-room door opened and Sir Archibald entered, the habitual look of distraction on his face disappearing at the sight of the marquess.
This office was apparently parallel with the back of a theater, disguised, perhaps, by the height of the theater stage loft.
It was a theater stage, a basically empty area that with the aid of props might be turned to any purpose.
Her black hair tumbled down to her shoulders, and her makeup was more than adequate for a theater stage or a dark alley.
Then a fog blew away like torn cobwebs, or curtains parting on a theater stage.
Thirty wooden benches, seating three to four people each, formed a series of half-circles in front of a bandstand the size of a small theater stage.
Beneath this was what seemed to be a rather crude mock-up imitation of an oasis-the kind of imitation that inexperienced amateur theater stage carpenters might have produced.
If it reminded Wallie of anything at all, it was of a theater stage seen from the rear, the beams and bare flats exposed, and all the bodies from the last act of _Hamlet_ strewn over the ground.