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Actress Yolanda Fernandez performs in front of spectators at Microteatro Por Dinero (Microtheatre for money) in central Madrid, Spain September 2, 2016. Image Credit: REUTERS

Madrid: Six people stand almost shoulder-to-shoulder in a black room — the entire audience for a play unfolding just an arm’s length away. With minimal set and a cast of only two, this is theatre stripped to its bare bones.

The micro-theatre trend has exploded since a first production in a former Madrid brothel in 2009. “Microteatro” is now an established brand, with theatres in 13 cities in Spain and the Americas.

Its success — the venue that originated the format put on its 1,000th show in April — provides a bright spot in Spanish theatre which has suffered from cuts in arts funding and a drop in audience spending since an economic crisis.

In the bar at the Madrid venue, 30-year-old theatregoer Maria Renee explained the appeal.

“The good thing is you don’t have to plan ahead. You can see one play or five,” she said, examining the productions on offer that evening.

Each short play costs only €4 (Dh16.49 or $4.50) and is repeated up to seven times a night, so spectators can dip in and out of the evening’s programme.

The format follows a basic idea of three 15s: plays of 15 minutes for around 15 audience members in a 15 square-metre space.

In the original production, 13 independent theatre groups put on 13 different shows, themed around prostitution, in the rooms of the former brothel where the sex workers used to receive their clients.

That show was so successful, with queues of more than 200 people waiting to get in, that the team bought a space around the corner. Since then theatre companies around Spain and from places as far away as Miami and Mexico have bought licenses to use the Microteatro logo, marketing and house style.

Playwright and director Jose Luis Lozano, 34, says the format is a showcase for new work and provides a training ground for writers.

“You’re obliged to say a lot in a short time. It’s a good place to experiment with your style,” he said.

For the players, the closeness to the audience makes the experience like a constant camera close-up, says Anthony Rotsa, a British actor starring in the theatre’s only English-language play.

“You see everyone’s faces, right there. If they’re enjoying it, you can feel that. And if they’re not, you can feel that too!”