0 the area in a theatre that is used by the public --
1 the part of a business such as a restaurant or hotel where the employees deal directly with customers: --
2 the employees of a restaurant, hotel, etc. who deal directly with customers: --
If the front of house was more knowledgeable about the ingredients, then it would save them having to ask the chef for the information.
There are also four lighting bars front-of-house, accessible only by ladder.
The building also contains a restaurant, shop, and full front-of-house and backstage facilities.
He cut a conspicuous front-of-house figure, joking with customers at the bar, and patrolling the stage with little solo dances until the audience was settled.
Opportunities are also often afforded to young people to work backstage, in front-of-house roles and as musicians in musical items and in the pit band.
A front-of-house matrix may be used at a concert to switch between the headliner's and the opening act's mixing consoles.
He was their front-of-house sound engineer while they were touring their self-titled debut album.
The work completed in 1993 improved acoustics and added a public elevator, additional lighting and rigging, front-of-house catwalks, and reworked the facades.
Hallam eventually works his way up to being a front-of-house porter at the hotel.