Role of Torchbearers on the Night
According to the torchbearer page on the Beltane Fire Society website, the torchbearers:
They are keepers of the boundary between ordinary space and that of the procession. The role of the torchbearers is both to light the action and, with the Blue Men, to manage the spectators.
Similarly, the Stewards:
This is mostly true. Stewards and torchbearers are occasionally considered not to be "proper" performers, but rather a lot of the performance would be invisible without torchbearers, and can't go ahead at all without stewards. Trust is indeed important: performers need to be sure that the person beside them won't accidentally set them on fire. Torchbearers don't always wear black, but the costume we chose usually tends to be something that will easily fade into the background, so dark colours have been preferred.
Torchbearers do indeed act as a moving boundary between the procession and the audience, and some may occasionally be detached from the procession to clear space elsewhere on the route. The "spectator management" role we share with the Stewards, and while a large flaming torch does lend a certain authority, we rely more on training in crowd control skills (primarily a matter of attitude and body language).
