词汇 | vaudeville |
释义 | vaudeville noun[ U ] USuk /ˈvɔː.də.vɪl/ us /ˈvoʊd.vɪl/(UKmusic hall) a type of theatre entertainment in the 1800s and early 1900s that included music, dancing, and jokes(19世纪至20世纪初的)综艺演出,歌舞杂耍表演 Theatre - general words audio described audio description break break a legidiom community theatre diegetic double bill dramatize hold kabuki musical Noh non-theatrical nondramatic premiere preview puppetry scenography slapstick thespian Examples of vaudevillevaudeville The reliance on formal, text-based analysis does leave some questions concerning the influence of other forms of entertainment culture such as theatre and vaudeville. It could do this only by exploiting what were effectively newly invented types of music drama: vaudeville avec airs nouveaux and opéra de genre. Immigrant and working-class patrons largely supplied vaudeville with talent and audiences. He sought out an international repertory the scope of which no other theatre could match, to say nothing of vaudeville. Managerial attempts to feminize vaudeville simultaneously created friction between traditional vaudevillians and ' ' legitimate ' ' performers. A request from a bar owner in 1843 to form a vaudeville society was promptly turned down by the local authorities. In the final vaudeville, as was the custom, every character appears on stage to sum up the lessons he or she has learned. These instances of consecration notably included the establishment of vaudeville theatre and music score publishing houses. Recent literature on vaudeville and timbre in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries is extensive. These progenitors include the ballad opera and burlesque, the minstrel show and operetta, the revue and vaudeville. This only makes it more curious that he should have ended his career in vaudeville. Hints of early 1900s vaudeville merged with touches of 1950s sideshow. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries public meetings, concerts, vaudevilles, theater plays, and the like were commonly held in these chambers and were very popular. The style of singing opera was directly related to the style of singing of vaudeville, operetta, and musical comedy, so the ubiquitous tremolo did not trouble contemporary ears. Film appeared as one attraction on the vaudeville stage, surrounded by a mass of unrelated acts in a nonnarrative and even nearly illogical succession of performances' (p. 66-88). See all examples of vaudeville These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. |
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