The hall buzzed with excitement as the audience waited for the show to start. |
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Much to the disgust of some listeners, the speech was interrupted several times by a few people in the audience. |
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The audience never hears from Candy again until the closing credit when a note reveals she has returned to her abusive ex. |
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Some people in the audience tittered nervously during an awkward pause in the speech. |
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The maestro's stunning chef-d'oeuvre mesmerized the captivated audience. |
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She's worried about embarrassing herself in front of such a large audience. |
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Its regular audience figures totalled over 150,000 annually, in ten principal venues, three of them in Wales and seven in England. |
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Both Tyler and Meat Loaf were subject to audience abuse, as bottles were hurled at them during their acts. |
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For her birthday in 2005, Tyler and her French band performed in La Cigale, Paris, and in Zaragosa, Spain, before an audience of 100,000 people. |
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Being aware of the danger of upsetting her audience, she was somewhat circumspect in her comments. |
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In New York, Duffy was left apologising to an audience after briefly crying. |
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The audience loudly clapped the actress, who responded with a deep curtsey. |
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He beguiled the audience with his smooth and seductive voice. |
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On 2 July 2005, the group appeared at the Live 8 concert in Hyde Park, London, playing to their biggest audience yet. |
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This provoked hostility from certain members of the audience, who were upset at Lostprophets inclusion on such a bill. |
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This leaves the audience to discuss and question the content of the play for themselves. |
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The horror feature received generally poor reviews but found a significant worldwide audience. |
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A comedian or comic is a person who seeks to entertain an audience by making them laugh. |
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To keep the audience on their toes Cooper threw in an occasional trick that worked when it was least expected. |
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I can add a laughtrack if no one in our studio audience happens to get the joke. |
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In this omake, the characters are breaking the fourth wall to talk to the audience. |
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Out of the summer season, Portugal has a large number of festivals, designed more to an urban audience, like Flowfest or Hip Hop Porto. |
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In Russia, the war was covered by anonymous satirical graphic luboks for sale in markets, recording the war for the domestic audience. |
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Somehow, before the broadcast, the audience laughter got omitted and the temp laugh-track was put in by mistake. |
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Published by Arrow Books, Fairweather Eden was designed for a popular audience. |
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Careful brand management seeks to make products or services relevant to a target audience. |
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The idea was to criticize previous arguments on a topic and emphatically and enthusiastically insert their own in order to win over the audience. |
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In 1488, Columbus appealed to the court of Portugal once again and, once again, John II invited him to an audience. |
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The 2002 French animated film Tristan et Iseut is a bowdlerized version of the traditional tale aimed at a family audience. |
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Neither the Pope nor Ambrose, bishop of Milan, where the emperor resided, granted them an audience. |
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Denied an audience by Pope Damasus, they went to Milan to make a similar request of St Ambrose, but with the same result. |
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Curiously enough, the other example in this field also dates back to an age when pensters found their widest audience only in belles lettres. |
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Adidas also has a website dedicated to the Indian audience that markets and sells products to its consumers in India. |
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By 1966 millions were tuning into these commercial operations, and the BBC was rapidly losing its radio listening audience. |
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Eventually, this change in content was reflected by a rise in audience that is continuing to this day. |
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In recent years, Radio 1 has aimed to include more of its content online in order to relate to the changing nature of its audience. |
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And he won't let his audience forget that he was part of a command performance for Queen Elizabeth II in June. |
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Hawking also maintained his public profile, including bringing science to a wider audience. |
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Nirenberg first announced his results to a small audience in Moscow at a 1961 conference. |
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Crick's reaction was to invite Nirenberg to deliver his talk to a larger audience. |
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As various other conreports have indicated, the comments of the audience during this show were rich in fannish humour. |
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The set ended with Hendrix destroying his guitar and tossing pieces of it out to the audience. |
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Saycast enables members to livecast their own music selection to a wider audience while chatting. |
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At one of them, the second Atlanta International Pop Festival, on July 4, he played to the largest American audience of his career. |
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The Prime Minister normally has a weekly audience with the Queen thereafter. |
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The latter in particular rose high in the charts and gained the band a much wider audience than before. |
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Artists express something so that their audience is aroused to some extent, but they do not have to do so consciously. |
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Consequently, in the late 16th century, Polybius's works found a greater reading audience among the learned public. |
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Television programs, web videos and social media can also bring an understanding of underwater archaeology to a broad audience. |
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While making small talk with the audience, Demi's greetings were reciprocated with loud screams from the Lovatics. |
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This statement caused much anger in the hearts of his Russian audience, and earned him much animosity during his professional career in Russia. |
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It aimed to be understandable to a broad audience and was based mainly on Central and Upper German varieties. |
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Others have a trick of popping up and down every moment from their paper to the audience, like an idle school-boy. |
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General cartography involves those maps that are constructed for a general audience and thus contain a variety of features. |
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There were lots of jokes on the show and they were pure corn, but the audience didn't mind. |
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Cume persons represent a radio station's cumulative audience, or the estimated number of individuals reached by a radio station. |
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Avoid 'PowerPointlessness!' A presentation should always be about your audience, not about you. |
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The 2010 Derry Halloween fireworks attracted an audience of over 20,000 people. |
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The embassy reached Nanjing, where the Zhengde Emperor was touring in May 1520, granting the Portuguese embassy a quick audience. |
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On his return he was utterly neglected, and could scarcely obtain an audience. |
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These are commonly arranged in fan shapes or crisscrossing shapes, at a closer proximity to the audience. |
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A fool is usually extravagantly dressed, and communicates directly with the audience in speech or mime. |
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Where there is a clearly defined specialist audience, privishing may be quite sufficient to reach government's intended informees. |
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Kolzo, upon reaching Moscow, was granted an audience with Ivan despite having a Muscovite bounty on his head. |
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Of course many of these accounts were propagandist in intention and designed for an unsophisticated audience. |
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In his zany prop comedy Gallagher would sometimes smash watermelons and splatter the front rows of the audience. |
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He reminded his audience of events in 88BC, when the same Mithridates invaded the Roman province of Asia, on the western coast of Turkey. |
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He switched from Latin to German in his writing to appeal to a broader audience. |
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One of the characters addresses the audience directly throughout the play. |
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Football matches between Mohun Bagan and East Bengal, dubbed as the Kolkata derby, witness large audience attendance and rivalry between patrons. |
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The actor's performance was too cute for me. All that mugging to the audience killed the humor. |
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The audience could not contain their laughter while the manualist played on. |
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Before the advent of television, radio drama had a huge popular audience and dominated much of the broadcast schedule. |
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There is simultaneous translation available to the judges, counsel, and to members of the public who are in the audience. |
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For example, one pro forma audience may be heard for a judge to order the production of a certain proof or to schedule another date. |
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Ana could imagine watching this on TV at home, and how exciting it must be. How gleeful the audience would be, watching Downs cut them to pieces. |
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Given the fiery tone of the conference, Anita Hill's speech must have come as a disappointment. She threw no red meat to the audience. |
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The best thing that happened due to this change was the respect from the audience. |
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These mechanisms sat directly on the stage blinding the eyesight of the audience. |
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These lights also caused bothersome heat that affected both audience members and actors. |
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Another audience with the Prince of Wales took place at Sandringham on 9 December. |
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Formal Latin literature began in 240 BC, when a Roman audience saw a Latin version of a Greek play. |
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In the evening, 8 o'clock opening night, followed by notes from the director, visits with friends from the audience and maybe a party nearby. |
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This change in the pronunciation of English, still not fully understood, makes the reading of Chaucer difficult for the modern audience. |
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This reflected a marked change in the audience for plays, as royal patronage was no longer the important part of theatrical success. |
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His friends worked to set him on his feet by organising courses of public lectures for him, drumming up an audience and selling guinea tickets. |
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With their internal rhymings and cryptic puns and allusions, Williams's lines of dialogue may tax the actor as well as the audience. |
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Chaucer's original audience was a courtly one, and would have included women as well as men of the upper social classes. |
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Although he published in the Swedish language, his methodology gained a wide audience through his lectures. |
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In particular, his Kristiania lecture of 1916 was important in gaining a wider audience. |
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The rishi asked one unfathomable question after another, until both he and his audience were reduced to the silence of unknowing. |
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With the textual issues largely addressed, if not resolved, attention turned to the questions of Chaucer's themes, structure, and audience. |
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While Chaucer clearly states the addressees of many of his poems, the intended audience of The Canterbury Tales is more difficult to determine. |
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The audience at Warped, unlike the sausage party you get at a typical ground-level punk show, is half-female, maybe more. |
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Please seat the audience after the anthem and then introduce the first speaker. |
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A few select spirits had separated from the crowd, and formed a fit audience round a far greater teacher. |
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Writers were encouraged to write in a way that kept in mind the speaker, subject, audience, purpose, manner, and occasion. |
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Determining the intended audience directly from the text is even more difficult, since the audience is part of the story. |
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This makes it difficult to tell when Chaucer is writing to the fictional pilgrim audience or the actual reader. |
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In one scene a local historian lectures an audience of British soldiers about the pilgrims of Chaucer's time and the vibrant history of England. |
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However, even in the latter he wears a blue singlet to help remind the audience of his working-class roots. |
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It may appear skillless for a preacher to snub the simple aspirations of his audience so brutally. |
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Yet for so public a figure, Jackson was socially awkward, inept at small talk and terrified when the distant audience became an adoring mob. |
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By the time she made it to the mic the audience was ready to eat every snarktastic morsel from the palm of her hand. |
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The contestant was placed in a soundproof booth so he could not receive help from the audience. |
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The spokescharacter was better liked when the gender of the spokescharacter matched the gender of the perceived target audience. |
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The runners spurted to the last lap as if they had extracted new energy from the applauds of the audience. |
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It stared at the audience with wide white eyes, then tapped the side of its throat, producing a drawn-out metallic squink. |
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Near to the audience the stage whisper was not much louder, although more distinct, than an ordinary whisper in private life. |
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Many legends have clustered around the decisive audience of Francis with the pope. |
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Members of the audience were too tame to interrupt the speaker. |
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He also has characters frequently refer to days of the week and specific hours to help the audience understand that time has passed in the story. |
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The moderator allowed audience members to ask the governor questions. |
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This provides a comparison through which the audience can see the seriousness of Romeo and Juliet's love and marriage. |
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The play utilizes a few key words that the audience at the time would recognize as allusions to the Plot. |
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I was happy to be speaking before such a receptive audience. |
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The interlude of the play's acting troop is less about the art and more of an expression of the mechanicals' distrust of their own audience. |
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They fear the audience reactions will be either excessive or inadequate, and say so on stage. |
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The mood is so lovely that the audience never feels fear or worry about the fate of the characters. |
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Little Red Riding Hood donked the Big Bad Wolf on the head with the basket and the audience laughed. |
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The performance takes place in several places, with actors and audience moving together to each setting. |
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In it, Shakespeare and his company perform the play for the real Oberon and Titania and an audience of fairies. |
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The significance, to those of Shakespeare's audience who had read Hero and Leander, was Marlowe's identification of himself with the god Mercury. |
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To tailor his works for a Victorian audience, she cast Percy Shelley as a lyrical rather than a political poet. |
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Belloc won that debate from the audience, as the division of the house then showed, and his reputation as a debater was established. |
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He reportedly could sing tolerably well and was not afraid to do so before an audience. |
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Blyton was delighted with its reception by children in the audience, and attended the theatre three or four times a week. |
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There wasn't a dry eye in the audience after her heart-wrenching performance. |
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During six weeks he took long hot baths, and ended up playing the organ for a surprised audience. |
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The consequence was that he had to appear, fiddle in hand, to acknowledge the genuine and hearty applause of the audience. |
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The performance was given on 29 September to an invited audience including Sir Henry Wood and most of the professional musicians in London. |
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Ecomania becomes a vehicle for propagating feminist ideology to a wider audience than would otherwise be receptive to it. |
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The band set another attendance record, with an audience of 76,229 at their Silverdome concert on 30 April. |
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Her song enraptured the audience with vivid images of the Scandinavian landscapes. |
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The motivational speaker not only instructed but also entertained the audience. |
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Filled with helium and propane, Algie, while floating above the audience, would explode with a loud noise during the In the Flesh Tour. |
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The magician asked for a volunteer from the audience to join him on stage. |
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They projected animations onto the wall, while gaps allowed the audience to view various scenes from the story. |
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A concert organised by the entrepreneur Richard Branson, it set an attendance record with 150,000 people confirmed in the audience. |
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This is a general audience who've bought tickets before they even knew we were on the bill. |
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He stepped up onto the platform and looked out into the audience. |
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The tour featured stage props including a giant phallus and a rope on which Jagger swung out over the audience. |
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She's a wonderful singer who loves to perform before a live audience. |
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However, there are still indie bands that start off locally, but eventually attract an international audience. |
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The book, according to music journalist Dave Thompson, slowly created an audience for gothic rock by word of mouth. |
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The show created a new global audience for the scene, after years of exclusively UK underground buzz. |
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Its weekend format, low queuing times and professional organisation have given it a loyal audience. |
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He gave a good speech, but floundered when audience members asked questions he could not answer well. |
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Often, operas are presented in their original languages, which may be different from the first language of the audience. |
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The Flow of Attention results showed us where we were losing the audience so we edited those few spots and had a better commercial. |
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Aimed at children and families, the Prom is informal, including audience participation, jokes, and popular classics. |
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The concertmaster usually sits to the conductor's left, closest to the audience. |
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The symphony warmed up inside the amphitheater while the audience crowded around outside. |
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One example in the late century orchestral music is Karlheinz Stockhausen's Gruppen, for three orchestras, which are placed around the audience. |
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Wagner's wife Cosima, the daughter of Hungarian virtuoso pianist and composer Franz Liszt, was among the audience. |
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A preview before an unsuspecting public audience was not a success, but a showing for the press produced positive reviews. |
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Garrett shows a remarkable ability to connect with the audience through anthemlike choruses. |
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To everybody's astonishment and indescribable relief, the audience gave him a standing ovation. |
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The fourth wall is the imaginary barrier between the stage and the audience, and the phrase is a metaphor for the dramatic frame. |
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The emergence of sound film effectively separated deaf from hearing audience members once again. |
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The sideshow feat was a just a gaff, but the audience was too proud to admit they'd been fooled. |
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At the end of the day, whatever medium you work in, it is about storytelling and holding your audience. |
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He sometimes uses editing as a way to represent the characters' psychological states, merging their subjectivity with that of the audience. |
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One is to fool the audience into seeing something seamless, and that's how I try to use it. |
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But he also habitually visits the other animals, often looking for a snack or an audience for his poetry as much as for companionship. |
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But the general characteristics of the genre set limits on the individual genre film, which renders it simpler for the audience to follow. |
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Therefore, the task ahead is easy. When the spotlight is on you, never let the audience down and you'll be golden. |
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Variations have been developed to increase the game's pace and appeal to a wider audience. |
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Along with holding races at night, other Grands Prix in Asia have had their start times adjusted to benefit the European television audience. |
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The competition attracts an extensive television audience, not just in Europe, but throughout the world. |
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The antirally demonstrators broke windows and forced their way into the building as the terrified audience fled in the opposite direction. |
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Faldo's attempts at humour in the opening ceremony seemed to fall flat with the audience. |
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Many of the best horses come to these festivals, which are watched by a huge television audience worldwide. |
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The PDC sought to attract a younger audience of both sexes for darts and market the game as a night out rather than just as a sporting event. |
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This helps to create a new generation of characters with which its audience could identify. |
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Fields also drew an audience of 5,000 people to the hall for a charity event. |
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Davis entered the Crucible Theatre holding the World Championship trophy and received a standing ovation by the audience. |
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Such religions, however, do maintain some appeal to a less exclusivist audience. |
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In 1970, the festival headlined by Jimi Hendrix attracted an audience of 700,000, seven times the local population at the time. |
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The commentators are given dedicated commentary booths situated around the back of the arena behind the audience. |
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The audience was more captivated by the growing ash at the end of his cigarette than by his words. |
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When the audience began laughing, the comedian milked the joke for more laughs. |
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I think they would try to humanize the worst villains in history out of their fear that the audience might not like the central character. |
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The administration felt that the plan would likely be unpopular among many Americans, and the speech was mainly directed at a European audience. |
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The station split frequencies in January 1995 launching Tay FM for a younger audience and Tay AM playing classic hits. |
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Because many in the audience were very close to one of the speakers, the DJ decided to play the music in mono. |
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Trevithick visited the Newcastle area in 1804 and had a ready audience of colliery owners and engineers. |
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At that performance, Carte stepped onstage and broke a glowing lightbulb before the audience to demonstrate the safety of Swan's new technology. |
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It has a range of articles including fashion, trends and technology with an upmarket target audience. |
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In response, the audience shouted No in unison, urging him to keep writing. |
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When he had ended all his sayinges in the audience of the people, he entred into Capernaum. |
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Bunyan's work, in particular The Pilgrim's Progress, has reached a wider audience through stage productions, film, TV, and radio. |
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The quartet was first performed in January 1941 to an audience of prisoners and prison guards. |
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These performances were intended as works of a new art form combining sculpture, dance, and music or sound, often with audience participation. |
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To the south of his palace, he ordered the construction of a large formal audience hall, and a massive imperial bathhouse. |
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The tour, which began in front of an audience of a thousand at the Kaufmann Auditorium of the Poetry Centre in New York, took in about 40 venues. |
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Almost all of the characters in the play are introduced as the audience witnesses a moment of their dreams. |
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The audience, like Lady Windermere, are forced to soften harsh social codes in favour of a more nuanced view. |
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He visited Hollywood, with which he was unimpressed, and New York, where he lectured to a capacity audience in the Metropolitan Opera House. |
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He railed against opera productions unrealistically staged or sung in languages the audience did not speak. |
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Sargent stopped the orchestra, calmed the audience by saying they were safer inside the hall than fleeing outside, and resumed conducting. |
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He later said that no orchestra had ever played so well and that no audience in his experience had ever listened so intently. |
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In particular, a musical is almost always performed in the language of its audience. |
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It's the terrain, the countryside, the expectations of the audience that make it one thing or another. |
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The brothers had to sing live and received such a positive response from the audience that they decided to pursue a singing career. |
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In August, Lambert and Stamp made a promotional film featuring the group and their audience at the Railway. |
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Modern writers have suggested the details of the battle were so well known that Gildas could have expected his audience to be familiar with them. |
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Gruffudd ap Cynan's biography was first written in Latin and intended for a wider audience outside Wales. |
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Like his audience and his critics, Bowie himself became increasingly disaffected with his role as just one member of a band. |
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The actor's inspired performance of Hamlet's soliloquy left the audience dumbfounded. |
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The differences may stem from copying or printing errors, from notes by actors or audience members, or from Shakespeare's own papers. |
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Unplugged features Clapton performing live in front of a small audience on 16 January 1992 at Bray Film Studios in Windsor, Berkshire, England. |
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On 7 September 2008, while performing at Virgin Festival in Toronto, a member of the audience ran on stage and physically assaulted Noel. |
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On the first concert in Canada, they performed to an audience of 15,000 people, singing twenty songs and changing a total of eight times. |
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The Spice Girls' image was deliberately aimed at young girls, an audience of formidable size and potential. |
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I saw a supremely talented artist reduced to tears, stumbling around the stage and, unforgivably, swearing at the audience. |
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On 11 February 2011, Winehouse cut short a performance in Dubai following booing from the audience. |
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The positive side is that it reacquainted an audience with this music and played an introductory role for others. |
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He reshaped each plot to create several centres of interest and to show as many sides of a narrative to the audience as possible. |
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It is one of Britain's great national sporting events and has a large worldwide TV audience. |
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In 2016, the cumulative worldwide TV audience for WRC TV's programmes was more than 700 million. |
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He sang from a flatbed truck on the American side to an audience in Canada. |
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Published editions of medieval poetry by John Barbour and Robert Henryson and the plays of David Lyndsay all gained a new audience. |
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Several audience members failed to realise that he was being tongue in cheek. |
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Much can be gleaned about Hobbes as a person from looking at the difficulties he faced while seeking an audience for Behemoth. |
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New technologies in printing and publishing allowed Art Nouveau to quickly reach a global audience. |
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The audience was very critical and some opposed to the new theory because it contradicted the established opinions on climatic history. |
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Letters patent are thus comparable to other kinds of open letter in that their audience is wide. |
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The audience applauded her anyway and she later performed an unaired version of the song which was uploaded to The View's YouTube account. |
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He used no pyro or video backdrop, and the audience stood close enough to its hero that it could hold nonconversations with him. |
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The riot sometimes spills over into the audience, and Kosky bears the proud scars of the booings he has endured. |
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He performed several songs in the Great Hall of Edinburgh Castle for the TV audience with little or no rehearsal. |
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Near the end of his life, Morgan reached a new audience after collaborating with the Scottish band Idlewild on their album The Remote Part. |
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However, the audience of these movements remained very low and their ideas did not reach a large public until the 20th century. |
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The audience was made up almost entirely of international youth, bearded and jeaned and unwashed. |
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To ensure the widest possible audience, Webmasters typically insert links to a nonframe version of the site. |
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The document represents British history as he and his audience understood it. |
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So while content can bubble up, it can also flow down to many smaller blogs and reach both a large audience and deep into networks. |
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A 1967 interview with David Frost brought the group to the attention of a wider audience. |
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The works were part of an Enlightenment movement to systematize knowledge and provide education to a wider audience than the elite. |
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Participating in the custom, either as performer or audience, signifies acknowledgment of that social group. |
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The extensive, yet affordable encyclopedia came to represent the transmission of Enlightenment and scientific education to an expanding audience. |
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If this performance deviates too far from audience expectations of the familiar folk artifact, they will respond with negative feedback. |
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Wanting to avoid more negative reaction, the performer will adjust his performance to conform to audience expectations. |
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In turn, he tells the tale multiple times to the same or a different audience, and they expect to hear the version they know. |
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He has given this performance one time more or less, the audience is different, the social and political environment has changed. |
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This unique culture served as a catalyst for journalism when Joseph Addison and Richard Steele recognized its potential as an audience. |
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Saldivar was in the audience to see his vacated title won by his old rival. |
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The programme soon became a national institution in the United Kingdom, with a large following among the general viewing audience. |
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Register racks at checkout stands offer manufacturers a captive audience for their products in the retailer's store. |
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The current revival also garners the highest audience Appreciation Index of any drama on television. |
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In contrast to Doctor Who, whose target audience includes both adults and children, Torchwood is aimed at an older audience. |
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He was trying to channel President Reagan, but the audience wasn't buying it. |
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But his film received a premiere last Friday night at midnight at the Egyptian Theater, a coveted slot at Sundance, and quite a few members of the audience left midmovie. |
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Knowing what he wants his audience to both think and feel when viewing his painting, the artist creates an image that will produce aesthetic emotion. |
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The movie was a bomb, but it put the band before an even larger audience. |
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To divert the audience with buffoon postures and antic dances. |
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A worldwide TV audience had a close-up view of the astronauts when they splashed down and as they emerged from the bobbing spaceship they call Gumdrop. |
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Their audience had been listening in increasing consternation. |
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When the audience grew restless, the speaker curtailed her speech. |
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And, as audience members, we have all experienced death by PowerPoint, the comatose state that results from being subjected to one stultifying slide after another. |
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The plot of the film was so derisive that the audience began to jeer. |
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The latest of a venerable franchise of docu-soaps, it opens, like its predecessors, with a voiceover giving the audience the lay of the promised land. |
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The next ambient effect came with the drumlike, thudding heels of a toddler in the audience, who drew close to his mother when the tongue wagging started. |
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It's always the way that somebody who's eyeworthy, who has stage presence, will go down better with the audience than someone who doesn't know how to sell themselves. |
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He asks the audience if they believe that they will be more loved by the gods if the city is in a state of faction than if they govern the city with good order and concord. |
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Looking at the Jury and the turbulent audience, he might have thought that the usual order of things was reversed, and that the felons were trying the honest men. |
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Whilst this seems like an incredibly low level of migration, the flow on effect from that audience sharing their experience will increase the result exponentially. |
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There have always been crudzines, but in the current environment the average fmz is done by someone with some skill, with a limited audience in mind. |
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It must have taken some guts to speak in front that audience. |
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He used a hired muscle to remove the unruly from the audience. |
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Vomitoria or entrances and exits were made available to the audience. |
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These identikit productions do not require specific performers to bring a new interpretation but require the repetition of the successful event for the paying audience. |
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As his perspective was so much at odds with other views, Hobbes struggled to understand the thinking of most of his potential audience and people in general. |
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The target audience of natural history was French polite society, evidenced more by the specific discourse of the genre than by the generally high prices of its works. |
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Eventually it became clear that the poems were not direct translations from the Gaelic, but flowery adaptations made to suit the aesthetic expectations of his audience. |
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Third, the newspapers reached out to new readers in multiple ways, including features, illustrations, and advertisements that enlarged the audience. |
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It was funded by advertising revenue based on a large audience. |
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They can't drive a vehicle, cook a meal, or walk Fluffykins at the same time that they watch your video podcast, so you gain greater audience focus. |
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Litigants are normally represented by counsel, but may be represented by solicitors qualified to hold a right of audience, or they may act in person. |
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The monarch holds a weekly audience with the Prime Minister. |
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The lengthiness of his talk bored most of his audience nearly to sleep. |
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There's certainly some overlap between litfen and mediafen, but there's also a distinctly different audience of mediafen, who may never look at this group. |
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Most notably, the international event such as the Olympics caused a shift in focus in the audience who now realize the variety of sports that exist in the world. |
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For Urdu publishers, the use of Devanagari gives them a greater audience, whereas the orthographic changes help them preserve a distinct identity of Urdu. |
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In addition FT was regarded as the most credible publication in reporting financial and economic issues among the Worldwide Professional Investment Community audience. |
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Beasts mainly interact with the audience, particularly children. |
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In England, an ale is a private party where a number of Morris sides get together and perform dances for their own enjoyment rather than for an audience. |
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At the same time, Heineken also introduced Strongbow Gold as a secondary brand to provide the choice of a real cider, which was targeted to a male audience. |
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In Hamlet, Shakespeare reverses this so that it is through the soliloquies, not the action, that the audience learns Hamlet's motives and thoughts. |
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When Romeo is banished, rather than executed, and Friar Laurence offers Juliet a plan to reunite her with Romeo, the audience can still hope that all will end well. |
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Shakespeare's audience, in this view, expected villains to be wholly bad, and Senecan style, far from prohibiting a villainous protagonist, all but demanded it. |
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He was certain that there are grimmer elements in the play, but they are overlooked because the audience focuses on the story of the sympathetic young lovers. |
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Anticipating that the target audience of young boys might not want to read a book written by a woman, her publishers asked that she use two initials rather than her full name. |
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In 1970, the television show Soul Train premiered featuring famous soul artists who would play or lipsync their hits while the audience danced along. |
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However, owing to their age, leg room is often cramped, and audience facilities such as bars and toilets are often much smaller than in modern theatres. |
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At the Montreal Olympic Stadium, a group of noisy and enthusiastic fans in the front row of the audience irritated Waters so much that he spat at one of them. |
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At the end of the album, the increasingly fascist audience would watch as Pink tore down the wall, once again becoming a regular and caring person. |
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The behaviour of the audience during the tour, as well as the large size of the venues, proved a strong influence on their concept album The Wall. |
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Stewart collected his records and saw his films, read books about him, and was influenced by his performing style and attitude towards his audience. |
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