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Перевод: vaudeville
[существительное] водевиль ; варьете; эстрадное представление
Тезаурус:
- Eliot refocuses his island world for "the Age of Jazz", in a piece not entirely dissimilar to, but more bitter than, his earlier vaudeville experiment in "Suite Clownesque".
- News of the child's intervention on stage at Scranton had spread through show business and some of the vaudeville columns had picked it up.
- Paul was soon making 50 short items a year; predominantly filmed vaudeville turns and trick films exploiting the new medium's capacity for visual magic.
- His dance throughout has its base in the classical vocabulary but MacMillan has coloured it by gestures from cabaret and vaudeville dance traditions, which serve to reveal not only class differences in behaviour but also genuine feelings.
- They had also brought Father Paddy in from his parish, and he had brought Father Donnelly who had invited Bishop Monaghan, but he had declined, saying he was a bit too geriatric these days for modern vaudeville and ragtime singing.
- Ronald Harwood's Reflected Glory, at the Vaudeville Theatre, is the tale of two brothers from Manchester who have come south to seek their fortune.
- IN A West End awash with naff musicals and compilation shows, an intelligent new comedy deserves a warm welcome and, for its first half at least, Ronald Harwood's Reflected Glory at the Vaudeville is a cracker.
- On her return to Broadway Miss Picon played a string of leads - all in Yiddish - at Kessler's Theatre, and won such acclaim that while still in her early thirties she was top of the bill at the Palace, America's leading vaudeville house, and had a New York theatre named after her.
- One of the best known of Lindsay's pieces of "Higher Vaudeville" was "The Congo", which linked savage chants and jazz rhythms in a rather bathetically facile way that just misses being electrifying.
- The climax to this ludicrous campaign from the Dark Ages came in 1953 with the tour of Europe by McCarthy's two young assistants, Mr Cohn and Mr Schine, who not only sounded like a bad vaudeville act but performed like one.
- He was gleeful about the idea of a Faber "Vaudeville" production in 1929 where he starred as a baritone singing Bolovian Ballads and a song about a blue baboon.
- The production policy followed by Sir Oswald Stoll, a leading figure in the vaudeville world, was an imitation of Hollywood pursued with the aim of maximizing productivity and ensuring a steady supply of films for his distribution setup.
- Popular American poetry of the period encouraged not only "the coming together of East and West", but also Vachel Lindsay's attempts "to carry vaudeville form back towards the old Greek precedent of the half-chanted lyric".
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