N.I. Sightlines
  • What We Do
  • What's On
  • Performance Notes
    • 39 Steps
    • Abigail's Party
    • A Fire Below
    • Alice
    • Bah Humbug
    • Beauty and the Beast
    • Blood Brothers
    • The Bodyguard
    • Bouncers
    • A Christmas Carol
    • Colleen Bawn
    • Dear Arabella
    • Dirty Dancing
    • Driving Home For Christmas
    • Educating Rita
    • The Elves and the Shoemaker
    • Evita
    • Fame
    • Ghost
    • Good Vibrations
    • Hairspray
    • Hansel and Gretel
    • Here Comes The Night
    • Jack and the Beanstalk
    • Jane Eyre
    • Jersey Boys
    • Joseph and his Amazing Technicolour Dream Coat
    • Kiss Me Kate
    • Macbeth
    • Madagascar
    • Nivelli's War
    • Peter Pan
    • Red
    • Saturday Night Fever
    • Sinners
    • Shirley Valentine
    • Shrek The Musical
    • Streetcar Named Desire
    • Sweeney Todd
    • The Band
    • The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
    • The Importance of Being Earnest
    • The Ladykillers
    • The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole
    • The Weir
    • Threepenny Opera
    • What The Reindeer Saw
    • Winners and Losers
  • Sightlines News
  • Contact Us
NI Sightlines: a registered charity helping make theatre accessible to people with visual impairments

What we do

Sightlines is a registered charity, run by volunteers, that makes theatre accessible to blind people by describing the visual element of theatre, including costumes, sets and props, to blind and visually impaired audience members. The process entails preparing programme notes which describe the set and scenery of the play, the characters’ physical attributes and their costumes. These notes are provided in advance, in the chosen accessible format, to blind audience members. Meantime, the describers prepare a script which details the physical element of the production, including such essentials as arrivals on and off the stage, the visual component of humour, the major moves and actions. This has to be delivered between the lines of dialogue so that the blind people do not miss any of the spoken lines. It is delivered remotely, via a headset, into the ear of the blind person and enables them to respond to visual information at the same time as the mainstream audience. If a laugh is dependent on physical gestures or facial expressions the blind people laugh at the same time as the rest of the audience. Sightlines also describes exhibitions, art works, carnivals and tours for blind people, translating visual significance into verbal impressions.

Sightlines runs and delivers training courses in audiodescription, having trained at Queen’s University, the Ulster Museum, Hillsborough Castle and the Island Arts Centre. Sightlines is a registered charity: NIC100837.

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