AI in stagecraft is the most-hyped and most-misunderstood category in the industry. Here’s the honest practitioner view from inside the production layer.
Where AI Is Real
Generative pre-visualisation — concept-to-image tools that let creative directors iterate visual ideas in minutes instead of weeks. Scheduling and rehearsal optimisation — logistics planning across complex multi-performer productions. Real-time lighting and projection — adaptive systems that respond to performer movement.
Where AI Is Hype
“AI-generated choreography.” It doesn’t work yet. The output reads as uncanny because human choreography embeds intent, breath, and reactive nuance that current models don’t reproduce. “AI performers” as substitutes for human performers — same problem; audiences read the difference instantly.
Where AI Helps Backstage
Costume fitting (body-scan to pattern-generation). Sound check (room-acoustic analysis). Casting (initial filtering of reels at scale). Each of these saves real hours.
Where AI Helps Front-of-House
Dynamic ticket pricing. Audience-profile prediction for marketing spend. Show-recap content generation. Each adds revenue.
What’s Coming
Real-time generative projection driven by performer position is the most credible near-term advance. Production-ready by 2027 in our estimation.
The Practitioner’s Rule
Use AI where it saves backstage time. Don’t use AI where the audience will sense the absence of a human decision. The audience always knows.
