Theatrical properties
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The term comes from live-performance practice, especially theatrical methods, but its modern use extends beyond the traditional plays and musical, circus, novelty, and even public-speaking performances, to film and electronic media.
Props are distinct from the scenery or sets, large objects in many productions that can be considered part of the stage.
Many props are ordinary objects. However, a prop must read well from the house, which is to say it must look to the audience like the real thing it represents. Many real objects are poorly adapted to the task of looking like themselves to an audience, so some props are specially designed to look more like the real thing than the real thing would. In some cases, a prop is designed to behave differently than the real object would, often for the sake of safety. Examples of special props are:
- a prop sack representing a burlap bag, that might have one side starched or sized to stiffly duplicate an especially convincing shape that a real (and limp) burlap bag might only rarely collapse into by chance,
- a prop weapon (such as a stage gun or a stage sword) that reads well but lacks the intentional harmfulness of the corresponding real weapon, and
- breakaway objects, such as balsa-wood furniture, or mock-glassware made of crystalized sugar, whose breakage and debris read well without having the weight or strength to injure.
- the prop manager, propmaster, or propman, whose sole or overriding responsibility is being sure performers get their props. (The manager of prop weapons, and in some cases real weapons serving as props, is often a separate person, and is in any case technically the armorer.)
- the prop table, where nothing but props may be left, and nothing removed except by the prop manager or the perfomer to whom the prop is assigned.
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