Published: August 14, 2025
What are cue cards? Definition & Meaning
Cue cards are large, legible cards that display scripted lines, beats, or prompts for a performer. They help you maintain timing, wording, and eyeline without breaking the flow of a scene or broadcast. Live sketch shows such as Saturday Night Live (NBC) depend on cue cards for fast rewrites and last-second timing adjustments. Talk shows and award ceremonies use them for introductions and scripted transitions. You can sometimes notice a slight side glance from the performer toward the card position.
How Cue Cards Work on Set
Cue cards are placed just off camera and act as quick-reference guides during performance. They give you a structured framework for delivering lines in the correct order and timing.
A crew member holds and flips the cards so you can focus on your delivery while keeping your eyes close to the lens.
How to Make Good Cue Cards
Designing cue cards for speed and clarity ensures they can be read at a glance under production conditions. Some principles from public speaking apply directly to on-set cue cards. Most important: keep each card to one main idea or section.
Also, use visual hierarchy with bold text for key points, and consider color coding for character cues or actions.
- Text size: 5–10 words per line in all caps with strong contrast.
- Line breaks: break text at natural pauses or beats.
- Color cues: highlight names, actions, or timing notes for quick reference.
- Numbering: label cards in scene or cue order.
- Placement: position cards at lens height to maintain a natural gaze.
Always avoid cramming too much information onto one card, as it slows reading and can break your performance rhythm.
Also, don’t use anything glossy! Glossy cardstock can cause glare, and missing beat marks can make the delivery sound flat. Always test card readability from performance distance before rolling.
Different Sizes and Formats of Cue Cards
While all formats fall under the term cue cards, production teams often choose size and layout based on distance, purpose, and performance style. The goal is the same in every case: clear prompts that can be read instantly without breaking delivery.
- Small handheld cards: About index-card size, used in presentations, stand-up sets, or debates. They carry short bullet points and are easy to hold discreetly.
- Medium cards: Around A4 or letter size, often used by talk show hosts or presenters for guest names, segment notes, or key questions.
- Large studio cards: Oversized boards with large, bold text, designed to be read from several meters away. Common in sketch shows, award ceremonies, and live broadcasts.
- Audience cue boards: Large printed signs for live audiences, prompting actions such as applause, cheering, or laughter.
On set, specifying the type of cue card ensures the format suits the scene, whether you are delivering lines, guiding a host, or directing audience reactions.
Cue Cards vs. Teleprompters
A teleprompter projects scrolling text onto glass in front of the lens, keeping eye contact directly with the camera. Cue cards are placed beside the lens, creating a slight off-axis gaze.

Cards are faster to prepare, do not need power, and adapt well to blocking changes, while teleprompters work best for long, uninterrupted speeches.
When to Use Cue Cards
Cue cards are ideal when speed and flexibility matter. They are used for live shows, sketch comedy, commercials, and shoots with frequent script changes.
- Live or sketch shows: quick updates between takes.
- Location shoots: simple setup without extra gear.
- Child performers: easy-to-read prompts for short lines.
- On-set ADR reference: reminders for exact wording.
- Host segments: short intros, sponsor mentions, or transitions.
Setup and On-Set Practice
Effective cue card use requires coordination between the performer, camera crew, and the person holding the cards. The goal is to keep them visible to you while remaining invisible to the audience.
- Lock eyeline: keep cards at lens height on the correct side.
- Stay silent: flip cards quietly to avoid sound pickup.
- Match blocking: adjust card position to follow your mark.
- Rehearse pacing: time flips to match delivery speed.
- Protect secrecy: hide cards between takes to avoid leaks.
Related Roles
A stand-in helps the camera and lighting teams set frames before you step in. A teleprompter operator controls the speed of text for on-glass reading. A script supervisor monitors continuity and wording accuracy. These roles often work alongside the cue card holder to keep scenes precise and on schedule.
Summing Up
Cue cards give you a reliable, flexible way to keep your performance accurate and on time. By planning readable layouts, placing cards correctly, and rehearsing their use, you can stay focused on your delivery while meeting the technical needs of the production.
Read Next: Want to build the right team for your production?
Start with our breakdown of above-the-line film set roles and quick guide to crew positions to understand who does what and why it matters.
Then explore all crew assembly articles — from hiring practices to on-set dynamics and team structure.
Or return to the Pre-Production section for casting, location scouting, and project planning.
