News1 min ago
Flyman?
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My great great great grandfather was a "flyman" any one got any suggestions as to what this was?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Flying, in theatrical terms, refers to that part of the theatre to do with the aerial movement (or flying) of scenery, props and, sometimes, performers. The so-called 'fly-towers' in old theatres are the bits that contain the pulley systems and the space for the operating gear.
Looking after these functions was a highly skilled and responsible job - still is, but they tend to get called tecchies these days. Very unromantic.
Looking after these functions was a highly skilled and responsible job - still is, but they tend to get called tecchies these days. Very unromantic.
Well I must admit, I do work in a multi-purpose venue rather than a purpose built theatre (and we don't have a fly tower), and I am aware that whilst our tecchies are multi-role, those in the theatre down the road are much more delineated in terms of what they do (like, their lighting people won't do sound, or stage shifting, for instance - ours have their specialisms, but are expected to be on hand for whatever's needed).
At the theatre where I work, we still have people with titles such as 'head flyman', whose job is basically, as saxy_jag says, to be above the stage, on the 'fly floor', during a performance, controlling the movement of scenery, and anything else that needs to be dropped on or pulled off the stage, via the use of pulleys or sometimes computers.
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