Difference between revisions of "Ghost Illusions"
(Created page with "''Ghost Illusions'' can refer to a theatrical technique or it can be (part of) the name of a particular theatrical presentation. Often in vaudeville style productions. =...") |
|||
Line 15: | Line 15: | ||
− | ''[[D'Arcy Read]] | + | ==D'Arcy Read's ''Ghost Illusions''== |
+ | |||
+ | See also [[D'Arcy Read]] and the [[D'Arcy Read Theatrical Company]] |
Revision as of 06:51, 7 June 2019
Ghost Illusions can refer to a theatrical technique or it can be (part of) the name of a particular theatrical presentation. Often in vaudeville style productions.
The term
The term Ghost Illusion (sometimes Ghost Illusions usually refers to a version of the famous "Pepper's ghost" illusion, named after the English scientist John Henry Pepper (1821–1900) who popularized the effect in a demonstration in 1862.
In stage performances of this kind the usual process is that the audience faces a stage or room with various objects in it, and then - on command - various ghostly objects or individuals appear to fade in or out of existence in the room, or objects in the room transform into different objects.
The technique, like the magic lantern, has been widely used in the theatre (as well as in amusement parks, museums, television, concerts and so on) since that time.
Specific theatrical presentations by this name produced in South Africa
D'Arcy Read's Ghost Illusions
See also D'Arcy Read and the D'Arcy Read Theatrical Company