Character Full Masks
Character Full Masks in Drama Training
Something special happens when a performer puts on a full mask. The face disappears and everything else steps forward. Without facial expression or speech, performers communicate through the body, fully and honestly. It can feel exposing, but that's why it works. Students discover character is lived through the body, creating clear, grounded, and complex figures. That's why full masks are widely used in drama schools, physical theatre training, and secondary classrooms.
Tone Options
Our character full masks are available in Light, Mid, and Dark paint tones, as well as a Neutral Tone option. Neutral Tone masks are designed to provide maximum flexibility when working with diverse groups. They are not intended to represent any specific ethnicity, but rather the absence of one. Many drama teachers and practitioners prefer Neutral Tone for workshop and classroom settings, as they allow all performers to use any mask freely and without implied ethnicity.
Please note: Neutral Tone masks exist in a slightly different theatrical reality to the Light, Mid, and Dark Tone masks and can appear almost ghostly if used alongside them.
Material, Construction and Delivery
- Made from high-impact thermoplastic.
- Hand-painted to a performance-standard finish.
- Lightweight, durable and comfortable to wear.
- Available individually or as a set of eight.
- Handmade to order in the UK.
- Shipped worldwide in 20 working days.
The Character Full Mask: A Living Tradition
Working with full masks connects you to a long lineage of theatre-makers. From ancient Greek theatre to Roman comedy, performers have used full masks to amplify character and reach audiences in a direct, immediate way. These masks were not just decorative; they were practical tools, helping actors project character clearly across large spaces and transform into something larger than themselves. That thread carries through medieval theatre, carnival traditions, and into Commedia dell’Arte, all the way to modern physical theatre.
In the twentieth century, practitioners like Jacques Lecoq brought mask work into contemporary actor training in a structured way. In his pedagogy, character masks arrive at a key moment, after neutral masks and larval masks, when performers are ready to bring psychological life into their physical work.
So when you are using character full masks in a class or rehearsal room, you are not just doing an exercise; you are stepping into a tradition that has been evolving for centuries.
The Character Full Mask: Psychology, Physicality, and Performance
Full masks ask a great deal of performers, but in the best possible way. Though every mask is fixed, it is deceptively complex in performance. Strangeface character full masks are designed to incorporate hints of several expressions, balanced rather than symmetrical, offering nuance. The performer is not confined to one expression but explores these possibilities when working with the mask, often discovering empathy and humour in its least expected qualities, sometimes referred to as the countermask.
Whatever choice is made, the body has to fully support what the mask is expressing. The mask sets the tone, but it is the body that brings it to life. Performers cannot rely on indicating emotion; they have to commit to it fully. If they do not believe in the character, it shows immediately and the mask feels empty. When they do commit, when the inner life is genuinely present, the mask suddenly feels alive. These are often the moments in training when everything clicks and the whole room can see the difference.
Over time, this builds a much deeper awareness of physical characterisation. Performers begin to notice the details: how a character holds their head, how they breathe, how quickly or slowly they move, and how their hands relate to the rest of the body. Nothing is neutral. Every choice communicates something.
The impact extends beyond mask work. Teachers often observe that students who have trained in this way bring greater clarity and confidence to their unmasked acting. Their characters feel more grounded, more specific, and more alive.
Character Full Masks in Practice: Training, Devising, and Performance
One of the strengths of character full masks is their adaptability across different settings. In training, they are particularly effective for developing clarity of movement, gesture, and intention.
In devising, they offer a powerful starting point. When a group of masked characters shares a space, relationships begin to form almost immediately. Conflict, status, and humour emerge naturally, often without needing to be forced, and the beginnings of a story can quickly take shape.
In performance, they create a bold and stylised theatrical world in which everything is heightened and inner life becomes visible. Audiences are drawn in by the clarity and intensity of what they are seeing.
When performers fully inhabit the work, something remarkable happens. A deeply human world emerges, with heightened levels of comedy and empathy that are difficult to achieve through naturalistic acting alone.
These sections were written by Russell Dean, Artistic Director of Strangeface Theatre Company and founder of Strangeface Masks, with over twenty years of experience in mask making, performance, and drama education.