Working Practices in Production Roles
What Are Production Roles?
Production roles are the specialised functions that together create a theatre production. Each role has distinct responsibilities, techniques, and processes. In VCE Theatre Studies, students work in two production roles: actor, director, or one of the design roles (set, costume, lighting, or sound design).
KEY TAKEAWAY: Understanding working practices means knowing not just what each role does, but how they work — the specific techniques, tools, processes, and decisions involved at each stage of the production process.
Acting: Working Practices
Planning Stage
- Script analysis — identifying character objectives, motivations, relationships, and arc
- Character research — biographical background, social context, psychological profile
- Voice and body preparation — beginning warm-up routines and physical condition
Development Stage
- Character exploration — experimenting with voice, physicality, and psychological approach
- Scene work — rehearsing with other actors under directorial guidance
- Blocking — working with the director to establish movement patterns
- Rehearsal technique — responding to direction, taking notes, implementing feedback
- Relationship development — building ensemble connection with other performers
Presentation Stage
- Technical rehearsals — integrating performance with technical elements
- Dress rehearsals — full run-throughs in costume with complete technical support
- Live performance — applying all preparation in the live event; responding to the audience
Directing: Working Practices
Planning Stage
- Script interpretation — developing the production concept
- Casting — selecting performers for roles
- Collaboration — working with designers to align vision
- Rehearsal planning — scheduling and structuring the development process
Development Stage
- Rehearsal facilitation — creating productive conditions for actors to explore their roles
- Blocking — choreographing movement and spatial relationships
- Giving notes — specific, actionable feedback after rehearsals
- Technical preparation — working with designers to integrate all elements
- Pacing and rhythm — shaping the overall tempo of the production
Presentation Stage
- Technical and dress rehearsals — finalising all elements
- Performance notes — post-show notes to maintain quality across a run
Design: Working Practices
| Design Area |
Planning |
Development |
Presentation |
| Set Design |
Research, concept sketches, scale model |
Construction, dressing, technical fit |
Installation, tech rehearsal, maintenance |
| Costume Design |
Research, design sketches, fabric sourcing |
Construction/alteration, fittings |
Dressing, quick changes, care |
| Lighting Design |
Concept, lighting plan, equipment list |
Rigging, focusing, programming |
Operation, cueing, troubleshooting |
| Sound Design |
Concept, source material, cue list |
Recording, editing, programming |
Operation, live mixing, troubleshooting |
Interrelationships Between Roles
Production roles do not operate independently. Their working practices constantly intersect:
- Director and actor — the director shapes the actor’s work through feedback, blocking, and concept direction; the actor’s choices inform the director’s decisions
- Director and designers — the production concept connects all design decisions; designers bring ideas that the director may adopt, adapt, or redirect
- Designer to designer — set, costume, lighting, and sound must function as a coherent visual and aural world
EXAM TIP: In written responses about working practices, demonstrate the interrelationships between roles. Show how your working practice in one role was shaped by, or shaped, the work of another role.
COMMON MISTAKE: Students describe each role in isolation. Always acknowledge how roles connect: “As the lighting designer, my programming was informed by the director’s concept of fragmentation, which led me to choose a staccato cueing rhythm that matched the episodic structure the director established in rehearsal.”
REMEMBER: Working practices are not just activities — they are purposeful processes in service of the interpretation. Every rehearsal, design meeting, and production decision should connect back to the production concept and intended meaning.