TheatreTheatre has provided many words and meanings which we use - ignorant of their origins - in everyday writing and speech. This is the first book to explore 2000 theatre terms in depth, in some cases tracing their history over two and a half millennia, in others exploring expressions less than a decade old. Terms are defined, shown in use and cross referenced in ways which will fascinate theatregoers, help serious theatre students and encourage those actively engaged in the theatre to examine the familiar from new angles. |
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Strana 6
action a or act may be used simply as an alternative to performance . The term is still common in variety : ' Describing herself in her act as " a little torment " , she certainly was ' ( review in The Stage , 28 March 1991 ) .
action a or act may be used simply as an alternative to performance . The term is still common in variety : ' Describing herself in her act as " a little torment " , she certainly was ' ( review in The Stage , 28 March 1991 ) .
Strana 7
action ' - actor 7 > > testify : ' Suit the action to the word , the word to the action ; with this special observance , that you o'erstep not the modesty of nature ' ( Hamlet , III.ii ) . The usage is first attested - along with ...
action ' - actor 7 > > testify : ' Suit the action to the word , the word to the action ; with this special observance , that you o'erstep not the modesty of nature ' ( Hamlet , III.ii ) . The usage is first attested - along with ...
Strana 295
The term is also used by adherents to the Stanislavskian system as an abbreviation of unit of action : a section of a scene which , like a paragraph in prose , seems to have a single topic .
The term is also used by adherents to the Stanislavskian system as an abbreviation of unit of action : a section of a scene which , like a paragraph in prose , seems to have a single topic .
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abbreviation according action actor alternative American appears applied artistic attested audience become borrowed Branagh Britain cast character comedy comes comic common commonly create curtain dance dates denote derived describe descriptive direction director door drama earlier early effect Elizabethan employed English example flat French frequently genre give given influence Italy known language later leading least lighting lines London manager meaning move movement nature nautical night noun occasionally opening origin performance period person phrase piece play Players plot popular possibly practice present probably production quoted refer rehearsal role scene scenery sense Shakespeare side skills sometimes sound stage stand suggests synonym technique term theatre theatrical things tion traditional tragedy usage usually variety verb Whilst word