Theatre Technologies in Production
What Are Theatre Technologies?
Theatre technologies encompass all the technical tools and systems used in a production to create and enhance the theatrical experience. These include lighting, sound, set machinery, projection/video, special effects, costume and makeup technologies, and communications systems.
KEY TAKEAWAY: Theatre technologies are interpretive tools, not just practical necessities. Every technical choice should serve the production’s concept and the script’s intended meaning.
Major Theatre Technology Areas
Lighting Technology
- Conventional lanterns — fresnels, profiles, parcans for standard illumination
- Moving lights — computerised fixtures that can pan, tilt, change colour and shape mid-show
- LED fixtures — energy-efficient, colour-mixing, no heat issues near performers
- Gobos — metal or glass patterns projected by profile spots (windows, forests, abstract shapes)
- Haze and fog — make light beams visible and create atmosphere
- Follow spots — hand-operated lights that track a performer
Sound Technology
- Live reinforcement — microphones and speakers amplifying live performance
- Playback systems — pre-recorded music and sound effects triggered by cue
- Digital audio workstations (DAWs) — software used to create and edit soundscapes
- Surround sound — multiple speaker arrays creating spatial audio experiences
- Body mics and radio mics — wireless microphones worn by performers
Staging and Set Technology
- Automated flying rigs — motorised systems for raising/lowering set pieces
- Revolves and trucks — motorised or manual platforms for shifting set
- Hydraulic lifts — elevating sections of the stage floor
- Projection and video — live feeds, pre-recorded video, mapping onto surfaces
Costume and Makeup Technology
- Quick-change rigs — costumes with velcro or magnetic fasteners for fast changes
- UV/black light — invisible under white light, glowing under UV
- Prosthetics — applied makeup elements for character transformation
- Wigs and hair — specialist styling to support period or character design
Technologies Across the Three Stages
| Stage |
Technology Role |
| Planning |
Research into available technologies; concept sketches incorporating tech; budget planning for equipment |
| Development |
Programming lighting and sound cues; integration with performance; technical rehearsals |
| Presentation |
Live operation during performance; troubleshooting; post-show evaluation of tech effectiveness |
Technologies create meaning when used purposefully:
- Projection mapping onto an actor’s body can suggest psychological invasion or fractured identity
- Sound design of a heartbeat that slows and stops can mark a character’s emotional death before their physical one
- A single follow spot in an otherwise dark stage isolates a character in their moment of truth
- UV-reactive costume elements can reveal hidden text or imagery only at climactic moments
APPLICATION: In a production exploring the theme of surveillance, a director might use live video feeds projected around the stage to create the sensation that every movement is being watched — making the technology itself a metaphor for the script’s central concern.
EXAM TIP: When discussing technology, always connect its application to the script’s intended meaning or production concept. Never describe a tech choice in purely functional terms (“we used a spotlight to light the actor”) — always justify it interpretively.
COMMON MISTAKE: Over-relying on technology as a substitute for strong performance or clear concept. Technology should amplify a well-developed interpretation, not compensate for the absence of one.
Theatre Technologies and Sustainable Practice
Technology choices carry environmental implications that a responsible production team considers:
- LED versus tungsten — LED fixtures use a fraction of the energy of traditional tungsten lanterns
- Digital sound design — software-based sound design eliminates the need for physical recordings and reduces waste
- Paperless stage management — digital cue sheets and scripts reduce paper consumption
- Equipment hire vs. purchase — hiring equipment for a single production reduces the environmental cost of manufacturing and storing equipment that will be rarely used
When proposing technologies in a production, noting sustainable alternatives demonstrates professional awareness and aligns with VCAA’s emphasis on environmentally sustainable practices.
REMEMBER: Technology in theatre is powerful, but power comes with responsibility — both for the artistic quality of the production and for the environmental and safety implications of the choices made.