Revolving stage
A revolving stage, commonly known as a turntable or revolve, is a circular platform integrated into a theater's stage floor that rotates around a central pivot to enable rapid and seamless transitions between pre-arranged scenes without interrupting the performance.[1][2]
Originating in Japanese Kabuki theater during the Edo period, the device evolved from early manual mechanisms like the bun-mawashi and mawari-butai, pioneered by innovators such as Denshichi Nakamura in the 1710s–1730s and refined by Shozo Namiki in 1758, to accommodate elaborate scenic changes for bulky sets.[3][2]
Adopted in the West with Karl Lautenschläger's electrically powered installation in 1896 at Munich's Residenz Theater for Mozart's Don Giovanni, it addressed longstanding challenges in maintaining audience immersion amid scene shifts, paving the way for more dynamic productions.[2][4]
Contemporary applications, often featuring motorized friction drives and computer-programmed cues, support complex designs in musicals like Les Misérables and Hamilton, where nested or dual turntables amplify storytelling through continuous motion and spatial reconfiguration.[1][2]