A Stage in Time

A Stage in Time
A Stage in Time
Developer: 1UP Studios
Category: Education
21 installs
Ratings not yet available
21 monthly active users
Revenue not available
Install Trends
Weekly +21
Steady
Monthly +21
Steady

A Stage in Time Summary

A Stage in Time is a mobile Android app in Education by 1UP Studios. It has about 21+ installs Based on AppGoblin estimates, it reaches roughly 21 monthly active users . Store metadata: updated Nov 3, 2025.

Recent activity: 21 installs this week (21 over 4 weeks) View trends →

Store info: Last updated on Google Play on Nov 3, 2025 .


0★

Ratings: 0

5★
4★
3★
2★
1★

Screenshots

App screenshot
App screenshot
App screenshot
App screenshot

App Description

Step into the late 18th century’s most spectacular and successful pantomimes!

This app lets you to step into the scenery of one of the late 18th century’s most spectacular and successful pantomimes.
Using three maquettes held by the Victoria & Albert Museum, the magic of augmented reality technology allows you to experience these sets at their true scale.
The pantomime Omai, or A Trip Around the World was written by John O’Keeffe, with its scenery
designed by Philip James de Loutherbourg, a Swiss artist who was the most innovative scenographer of his day. It premiered at Covent Garden Theatre (on the site of what is now the Royal Opera
House) in December 1785. Then, as now, pantomime was associated especially with Christmas.
As is suggested by the pantomime’s subtitle – A Trip Around the World – it sought to transport audiences to far-flung corners of the globe in a dizzyingly rapid-fire sequence of scenes. In the 18th
century, theatre offered audiences the pleasures of vicarious travel.
But this was also a period of empire, and the British stage was a powerful mechanism in creating
and sustaining the fantasy of British supremacy, racially and culturally.
The titular protagonist of Omai is based on a real person: Mai, a man from Ra'iatea in the South Pacific. He was taken by Polynesia to London by Captain Cook in 1774. Once in Britain, Mai became
a celebrity and curiosity – an example of a ‘noble savage’.