| BALCONY | Seating area in the upper tier of a theatre (7) |
| THRONE | Presumably, seating area in The Palace where member of royal family relaxes watching The Queen (6) |
| EXOSPHERE | Former partner sat with nothing special in this area in the upper circle |
| FLEAPIT | Said to run from seating area in cinema (7) |
| EXITROW | Special seating area in an airplane |
| UNITARY | _ authority, a district administered by a single tier of local government (7) |
| ETAGERE | Shelf for objet d'art; or, a tier of plates for small sandwiches and cakes (7) |
| VANILLA | Orchid pod providing the taste for one tier of Neapolitan ice cream |
| STADIUM | A sports ground with tiers of seats for spectators (7) |
| SURGERY | The inner workings of a theatre (7) |
| ECHELON | Awful leech attached to tier of organisation |
| BANK | From "bench", a word for a money-dealer's table or counter that came to mean an establishment for the custody of money; a tier of oars; a row of keys; or, a sloped side of a river (4) |
| TRIREME | Ancient galley with three tiers of oars on each side (7) |
| GALLERY | Part of a theatre largely reconstructed (7) |
| DECK | Floor of a ship; timber terrace providing a seating area in a garden; or, a platform supporting a record player's turntable (4) |
| ROW | A spell of sculling; the distance oared; a raucous quarrel; or, a drill of vegetable plants, line of stitches, queue of people, rank of chess squares, tier of seats or other orderly file (3) |
| LASCALA | Abbreviated name of a theatre where Puccini's Madama Butterfly premiered (2,5) |
| OPENAIR | Outdoors (of a theatre, eg) (4-3) |
| ADS | What the lowest tier of a streaming service usually includes |
| LEVELA | Lowest tier of a parking garage, perhaps |