From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishthe stallsthe stallsBritish EnglishAPT the seats on the main level of a theatre or cinema a good seat in the front row of the stalls → stall
Examples from the Corpus
the stalls• The horse fair had been abandoned, the stalls cleared and the shops deserted.• Before the lights went down I saw that some one below in the stalls was trying to catch my attention.• This is so with the statement that he hoped for a seat in the stalls for under £10.• If I was 12 years old I'd be squealing in the stalls as well.• A gargantuan Teddy boy was standing in the stalls, looking down at his feet.• In the stalls Timothy Gedge sat three rows behind the children from Sea House, with the carrier-bag by his feet.• He and April, Maggie's mum, had done a great deal of their courting in the back seats of the stalls.• Sandi spied the stalls in an adjoining room and hurried into one, releasing her bladder.