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  2. Box office - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Box_office

    The term "box office" was being used from at least 1741, deriving from the office from which tickets for theatre boxes were sold (although the use of "box" for a private section from which to watch the play was in use in 1609); this is the derivation favoured by the Oxford English Dictionary.

  3. Box (theatre) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Box_(theatre)

    In a theatre, a box, loge, [1] or opera box is a small, separated seating area in the auditorium or audience for a limited number of people for private viewing of a performance or event. The interior of the Palais Garnier , an opera house , showing the stage and auditorium, the latter including the floor seats and the opera boxes above

  4. Parts of a theatre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parts_of_a_theatre

    Seating layouts are typically similar to the theatre in the round, or proscenium (though the stage will not have a proscenium arch. In almost all cases the playing space is made of temporary staging and is elevated a few feet higher than the first rows of audience. Black box theatre: An unadorned space with no defined playing area. Often the ...

  5. Glossary of theater terms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_theater_terms

    Auditorium: The portion of a theater which contains the audience seating. [2] Avant-garde: Experimental or innovative works or people, derived from the French. [2] Balcony: An elevated portion of seating in the back of the auditorium. [1] Curtain Call: At the end of a live performance the cast will come out and do a bow while the audience ...

  6. Talk:Box office - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Box_office

    According to the Oxford English Dictionary, a box(-)office is "the office at which seats may be booked for a theatrical performance or other entertainment (orig. for the hiring of a box)." So it's named after the fact that you could hire a box (ie, partitioned-off seats at the theatre) and nothing to do with coin-boxes.

  7. Theatre-only shift 'speaks volumes' for box office as studios ...

    www.aol.com/finance/theatre-only-shift-speaks...

    Younger moviegoers lift box office Overall, experts say that more adult-driven films and non-blockbuster genres — including indies, dramas and musicals — could go direct to streaming due to ...

  8. Blockbuster (entertainment) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blockbuster_(entertainment)

    In December 1950 the Daily Mirror predicted that Samson and Delilah would be "a box office block buster", and in November 1951 Variety described Quo Vadis as "a b.o. blockbuster [...] right up there with Birth of a Nation and Gone With the Wind for boxoffice performance [...] a super-spectacle in all its meaning". [4]

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