Next time someone disrupts your evening by clambering in or out of a nearby theatre seat, remember: it needn’t be this way.
In 1924, Louis J Duprey of Dorchester, Massachusetts, patented a system that “permits any patron of the theatre to enter or leave his place without at all disturbing other patrons”. You, the patron, entered vertically, though a trap door, already ensconced on a chair. When you wanted to leave, a discreet twist of a knob activated the machinery in reverse, causing the chair, and you, to quietly sink back down, and out.…
—So begins this month’s Improbable Research column in The Guardian.
Published on April 08, 2014 03:52