They also gained wider audiences through public readings in both poetry and prose. |
|
What began as a group of shaggy street performers and itinerant stilt-walkers now commands huge audiences and premium prices in Las Vegas. |
|
Small audiences and an intact punk community give a personalized edge to this music-driven push. |
|
The significance of such a model is in its ability to account for subtle shades of difference between musicians and audiences. |
|
Today's audiences can hardly appreciate the ahistorically high standards to which they have grown accustomed. |
|
Readers may imagine that news outlets are packed with stories about Z-list celebrities to attract audiences. |
|
In the new global figures, audiences in the USA via FM rebroadcasters are at their highest level ever. |
|
Even fewer students have any recall of these topics, as I know from having asked audiences at various colloquia. |
|
Two kinds of writing by Seth Godin gives some quick, focused tips on how to write for different audiences. |
|
The theater becomes a site of self-forgetfulness for audiences who experience a reprieve from disciplines associated with memory. |
|
Apparently audiences couldn't get enough of the 7-year-old bilingual Latina who lives inside a computer. |
|
Collaborations between dance and musical companies broaden audiences and enrich repertoire. |
|
But the film, combining the theme of adoption and the refugee problem in Sri Lanka, appears to have satisfied audiences in its totality. |
|
The reaction from the employees and audiences, however, was intense and severe. |
|
For many years, microcinemas have helped to bring independent films to audiences around the world. |
|
Many of the men one sees in audiences are considerably younger but lack the youthful vigour of conductors. |
|
She then brings the shows to different audiences and venues including microcinemas, bars, living rooms, galleries, schools, and churches. |
|
It shocked and titillated audiences around the world when it first hit the theatre in 1969 and has not been seen in Calgary for over a decade. |
|
I joined so I could spread the word on tons of books that I know would have larger audiences, if only readers knew about them. |
|
Apparently when American theatre audiences heard the song they were reduced to tears. |
|
|
For the last five years Peggy-Anne Berton has been entertaining audiences with her own version of beat storytelling. |
|
A time when audiences full of the young and young at heart can embrace their innocence and enjoy the magic of theatre. |
|
Since 1995 they've been wowing audiences with a crossover style combining their operatic training with Irish folk. |
|
Having performed at Just for Laughs in '97 and '98, he's back to take another crack at wowing audiences. |
|
One minute he's performing in a musical, the next he's in a television drama, and the next he's wowing audiences with live cabaret. |
|
The alchemy of stage and screen can transform books and introduce them to new audiences. |
|
He fails completely, of course, but with his attempts to confound and wrong-foot audiences more used to linear stories, it is a noble failure. |
|
I am a mentalist with over a dozen years' experience reading minds and astonishing audiences. |
|
Guess audiences will have to wait till the opening night to find out if the adaptation hooks them as much as it did the director. |
|
He traveled the country giving talks and ambushing naive scientists in debates before huge, receptive audiences of churchgoers. |
|
There is a risk that modern audiences could miss the point of Noel Coward's semi-autobiographical play Present Laughter. |
|
Wayne has performed many times and each time he amazes audiences with his vocals. |
|
The Meistersingers from Tokyo Conductor Masaaki Suzuki and his Japanese Bach Collegium left audiences speechless in a recent tour of Germany. |
|
They got to work on a revised finale, this time offering mainstream audiences all the mecha action they demanded. |
|
He has seduced audiences with his charismatic portrayals of characters for 57 years. |
|
Olson is an electrifying performer, who seduces her audiences with wit and energy. |
|
Most blogs have a dozen or so readers, but a handful have built up audiences in their thousands. |
|
The unifying factor in all this is her desire to give audiences a sensuous experience. |
|
The duo knew they were on to a good thing when they first previewed at the Edinburgh Festival in 2002 to packed audiences. |
|
Imperial prosperity produced audiences keen to sample thespian delights and able to afford to. |
|
|
So the genre is still popular with budding thesps and egomaniacs, even if audiences are beginning to tire of it. |
|
Displays of unencumbered emotion have been a regular characteristic of pop concert audiences ever since Elvis scuffed his Blue Suede Shoes. |
|
We hope that the new season will offer our audiences true variety and contrast in theatre-going experiences. |
|
It is vital that our audiences can rely on coverage of events which is scrupulously impartial, fair, accurate, balanced, and independent. |
|
The slickest of these, like glib lawyers paid to advocate a poor case, are accustomed to bamboozling innocent audiences. |
|
It opened amidst much ballyhoo in the US in October, but audiences forgot to show up. |
|
One newspaper cartoon had Scottish ballet audiences scrapping in the aisles. |
|
Folky guitar strummers, pop balladeers and jazz groups still prefer quiet, seated audiences. |
|
Then I asked him if he felt any shame in facing his audiences and telling them bald-faced lies. |
|
The eventual work, while not a disaster, was tepidly received by critics and audiences. |
|
Not many literary launches are televised live and few audiences are so euphoric. |
|
The crucial resource was the network of fundamentalist pastors and the networks of audiences for televangelism shows. |
|
Most mandolinists did not play for classical music audiences but rather played in noisy vaudeville acts. |
|
Drawing in audiences from far outside the folk scene, does she still consider herself a folk artist or just an artist? |
|
Politicians concern themselves predominantly and directly with the malign influence that broadcasting might exert on its audiences. |
|
Anti-war movement teach-ins, discussion meetings and debates continue to attract large and enthusiastic audiences across Britain. |
|
For 130 years, their topsy-turvy plots and satirization of love, honour, class and duty have kept audiences packing houses. |
|
Also, American audiences and Sassenachs will be bemused by the strong accents. |
|
Delivered with that kind of sass, some audiences might find these plays hard to take. |
|
Everybody's really excited to see the impact the campaign has made on those target audiences. |
|
|
She adds that the project intends to target audiences that don't traditionally read books. |
|
Industry circles have started making calculations but the tastes of audiences are truant and calculations may go awry. |
|
After the second world war, the gap between audiences and avant-garde composers opened into an unbridgeable abyss. |
|
The duo have been entertaining audiences all over the world for more than a decade with their musical madness and bizarre antics. |
|
It won't find much of an audience outside of the art house circuit, because mainstream audiences will quickly grow tired of its talkiness. |
|
As audiences dwindled, Apollo's pledge to keep the cinema open until a buyer could be found died with the box office takings. |
|
Fortunately, I don't have time to take her up on her offer, so Amherst audiences were mercifully spared. |
|
Now, all sorts of entities and non-entities can reveal to mass audiences the agendas of these media machers. |
|
It's a way of bringing writers to the attention of audiences who wouldn't otherwise buy their books. |
|
From what I understand the big political blogs actually have larger audiences then most political magazines. |
|
These books reach multi-ethnic audiences by emphasizing the universal within the culturally particular. |
|
Sociologists, psychologists, policy makers, and educated lay audiences will find this book interesting and helpful. |
|
For years George Cole has delighted TV and film audiences with his portrayal of cheeky conmen. |
|
The council commended the way in which BBC Wales now works with its audiences, immersing programme makers in the community. |
|
Newspaper readership and television audiences are on the decline while the popularity of blogs and online news sources has steadily increased. |
|
He has a proven track record in developing innovative, award winning programmes which the BBC audiences love. |
|
To survive, a commercial broadcaster must produce programmes that audiences want. |
|
Such series have proved popular with viewers, attracting audiences of up to three million per programme and many sales to overseas networks. |
|
If reports are correct, Saturday's edition was watched by one of the smallest audiences in the programme's forty-year history. |
|
She is particularly well known to television audiences for her powerful performances in popular dramas. |
|
|
This is the first time an accordion player has been invited to entertain audiences at the event. |
|
Scheduled to be released in April, this is one film which will entertain audiences not in theatres but in school halls. |
|
And in any event the audiences in 1602 were no doubt so used to the convention of female parts being played by men that they barely noticed it. |
|
And he's still a visible and vital presence on the concert circuit, where audiences come to revere the octogenarian. |
|
She was known for her deep, piercing eyes and dusky, throaty voice that always seemed to command the full attention of audiences. |
|
Six years ago, she had never even considered that she might take part in international music festivals and introduce bands to concert audiences. |
|
What is interesting of course is that this is the most successful Indian film with English speaking audiences in North America and Europe. |
|
Book festival audiences are inclined to be well disposed towards the writers they come to hear. |
|
The cabaret performers and their audiences shared a more or less hidden opposition to social taboos and censorship. |
|
The strange fascination of talent shows has made them a spectacle that continues to draw attentive audiences. |
|
If you're still getting massive audiences and selling records and putting bums on seats, you can't be all bad. |
|
Like the TV shows, audiences are never sure if they are going to have a laugh or a lump in the throat from one moment to the next. |
|
Why do you think audiences have trouble with modern or atonal classical music? |
|
We have to remember that Athenian audiences would sit through nine hours of tragic performance. |
|
Most astonishingly, the movie's sole purpose seems to be to prepare audiences for the next installment. |
|
This hilarious play, derived from the work of Brendan Kennelly, has delighted audiences all over the county and should go down a bomb in Finuge. |
|
The strange thing was, audiences appeared to enjoy having their eyes and ears assaulted by what they saw, and they kept on coming back for more. |
|
Yet audiences flocked to see Gordin's terse presentation of sorrow and rue. |
|
Clients and other audiences for the book will want to see more than just pretty pictures. |
|
He had a gift for expressing the longings and anxieties of his contemporary audiences. |
|
|
Certainly a film for art house audiences, but also a nice first time introduction to Danish cinema that is bold and confident. |
|
In England the film was mainly shown in art house cinemas to art house audiences. |
|
In art galleries curators seem obsessed by mass media and celebrity, audiences and participation. |
|
Her graceful form, which bodybuilding audiences had not seen onstage since 1984, belied her arm-wrestling and powerlifting experiences. |
|
It's a classic example of audiences putting composers between a rock and a hard place. |
|
A staple of circuses, lion tamers dazzle audiences by prodding the big cats to perform. |
|
I can picture audiences roaring with laughter at shorts such as this, though I find that humor has come a long way since. |
|
Every concert was packed by enthusiastic audiences who clearly approved of what they heard. |
|
He brought to his performances the residual skills developed from years on the road, performing in front of live audiences. |
|
The camera lingers for a few seconds, and audiences let out a collective gasp. |
|
It's a riveting character study that really deserves to make a big splash with audiences of every age. |
|
The highest artistic standards would still be applied to the top groups and performers by their cognoscenti audiences and critics. |
|
His lack of stage fright is combined with an equal desire to inspire audiences, either through a motivating speech or a stirring song. |
|
He would not give me a pay rise despite the audiences flocking to see me and lining his pocket. |
|
Kerr tells his audiences that the explosion blew him about 30 yards from where he was standing, and likens the impact to being hit by a truck. |
|
Or could it be that audiences are hungry again for light-hearted escapism and happy endings? |
|
Archie performs his moth-eaten variety act before dwindling audiences in dog-eared music hall theatres. |
|
I sometimes find myself in awe of people like art speigelman, who smoke in front of audiences in places that smoking isn't allowed. |
|
But audiences willingly collude in that pretence and rejoice in the characters it brings to life. |
|
The only note of caution voiced by one reviewer was whether the film had universal appeal to cinema audiences. |
|
|
For example, the contemporary American cinema tends to position teenagers at the center of audiences for blockbuster films. |
|
But will today's audiences care about a bed-hopping rogue born on the wrong side of the blanket who eventually finds true love? |
|
No disaster can hit the world, without audiences increasingly turning to those new producers of information. |
|
Fuller doesn't rouse his audiences with smooth patter and startling revelations of abuse he's suffered. |
|
A number of Sir Michael's movie classics have been revamped for modern audiences. |
|
The result was a set of cinematic sickies so drenched in dread and bloodstained bodies that audiences couldn't help but be disturbed. |
|
Dublin audiences often found in the Ulster theater's performances a more truthful representation of Irish life than in the Abbey Theatre plays. |
|
Each lecturer has designated his or her topic for three different types of audiences. |
|
Move this attractive, affordable lectern from room to room and keep your notes in order and your audiences wowed. |
|
So I'm quite comfortable writing for those audiences, with slight modifications. |
|
The rest of the novel remains intact for audiences who like the movie and want to know what happens to these characters. |
|
His most ambitious music was abominated by conservative critics and also baffled concert audiences. |
|
If you had doubts about how riveting Manet's subject was to audiences of the time, the documentary section of the show set your mind at rest. |
|
It was amazing to see who landed the roles, and even more surprising who caught on with audiences. |
|
The show has provoked an emotional response from audiences everywhere it has been staged. |
|
With a large cast on his hands, Whedon had to give audiences a sense of each character in short, economic bites. |
|
The convention of the lip sync begins to acquaint audiences somewhat with its acceptability. |
|
In Spain, the audiences shout 'jaleos' while the flamenco dancers' footwork and the tapping of her castanets move to the strumming of the guitar. |
|
Coloured Clocks tour as a four piece band, wowing audiences with their catchy hooks combined with improvisational psychedelic jams. |
|
The absence of dramatic action was of little account to audiences used to the lyrical pastoral play. |
|
|
Online, audiences or communities don't necessarily build so much as grow or accrete. |
|
Her questionably close relationship with her son creates another strand of the drama which audiences in the late 19th century found challenging. |
|
Each of these showmen altered the presentation to accommodate changing audiences. |
|
Pastors, ministers, rabbis, imans, etc influence large audiences in their weekly sermons. |
|
My films were shown in Europe, but I believe most European audiences could not understand them. |
|
They had no qualms about putting on an act, playing on ethnic stereotypes people enjoyed to get audiences. |
|
The live act contains unusual aspects like action painting, and is demanding, explosive and equally extreme, and the audiences reflect that. |
|
Some audiences will find this annoying, for me it fit in perfectly with the subtle weirdness of the proceedings. |
|
We all instinctively feel that to lose our memory is to lose ourselves, a prospect that stirs audiences with mixed feelings. |
|
The Coleman festival which took place from September 2th to 4th was a resounding success with packed audiences each night at the concerts. |
|
On the one hand, National is telling business audiences that New Zealand has a bipartisan trade policy. |
|
The tongue trills of the Irish singer Roger Whittaker continue to delight audiences the world over. |
|
Three hours is a long time in the cinema, longer than most audiences are prepared to put up with. |
|
There are no special-effects, no car chases or shoot-outs, just a touching, fascinating sense of humanity that left audiences spellbound. |
|
He concocts a pilot proposal so offensive, so bound to misfire with test audiences, it's sure to get him canned. |
|
These artists added sophisticated polish to country music, facilitating its popularity among middle-class audiences. |
|
Back to the music, what can audiences in the south expect from Tony's current tour? |
|
No school gyms of adulating audiences on their feet to cheer the genius, no comic book figures dropping bon mots could press those keys. |
|
Indi-pop, bhangra and its aggressive promotion through music channels also saw rock's audiences declining. |
|
This year they will have audiences splitting their sides with laughter with their crazy antics. |
|
|
This message, delivered in his quiet, thoughtful manner, resonates among his audiences. |
|
His has a great rapport with his audiences and requests are always welcome. |
|
In later years public demand saw him travelling the length and breadth of the country to deliver his budget speeches to rapt audiences. |
|
But, Newman points out, the personalities and relationships that keep audiences rapt are not neglected. |
|
The unique combination of the highland dancers and award winning kapa haka will thrill our live audiences. |
|
Purely rational arguments often fail to capture potential political audiences, so appeals to emotion are extremely useful. |
|
The Everyman Theatre in Cheltenham has launched its autumn season brochure to help give audiences a warm glow when the summer sun fades. |
|
It's vital that our marketing has effective strategies for reaching all of these audiences. |
|
Then, and only then, do texts matter, and real trade books are often a better vehicle than books written for captive student audiences. |
|
To enhance readability among non-academic audiences, the author chose not to place footnotes and citations in the text. |
|
It denies the existence of different genres, different generations, different audiences and readerships. |
|
Amelie is the sort of film that will have the same resonance for audiences across the world. |
|
Psychologists throughout the country consistently found receptive audiences for psychology's messages about how to build resilience. |
|
Hence, perhaps, her later insistence on singing to the captive audiences at her poetry readings. |
|
Kathleen Jamie is the latest in a line of present-day poets who are attracting large audiences to the Grasmere readings. |
|
Even in Fatal Attraction, Lansing said that audiences always rooted for the horrible, cheating husband he played. |
|
The magician has been mystifying his audiences for years with his amazing tricks. |
|
What could audiences possibly gain from watching Hollywood personnel go through the motions of adhering to an Asian precursor? |
|
The original French title, Bande de Filles was translated to Girlhood in order to appeal more to American audiences. |
|
These are the same Taliban fighters known to U.S. audiences from the documentary Restrepo and the film Lone Survivor. |
|
|
By Rich Goldstein Are audiences tired with caped crusaders and gritty reboots? |
|
Both Britton and Chandler were tight-lipped about just where audiences will find Eric and Tami Taylor. |
|
Though unlike these artists, bulletproof Stockings exclusively performs for ladies-only audiences. |
|
David Valls told audiences that baroque minimalism was the effect of his collection, but that the Japanese philosophy of wabi sabi lay as the basic inspiration. |
|
The war dance thus becomes the ready visual metaphor for Indian barbarity in general and provides audiences with a frame of reference for viewing scenes of native life. |
|
She took to the London stage again but this time her lateness and unreliable vocals elicited cat-calls, jeers and even projectiles from angry audiences. |
|
Musicians, dancers, acrobats, clowns, actors, mimes and every hybrid in between entertain and educate audiences of kids, their parents and teachers. |
|
They're not there to see me, which makes it all okay, and by now the audiences realize that I will be brief, and that makes them well-disposed to my appearance. |
|
This graceful and prosperous old city is dominated by the fantastic arena, a well-preserved Roman amphitheatre where audiences of 25,000 attend summer opera concerts. |
|
Later I started putting the same question to audiences across the country. |
|
What sports pundits rarely bother to do is confront themselves, or their audiences, about their complicity in this pattern. |
|
With Entourage and Vincent Chase, do you feel like audiences and producers tend to conflate you with the character? |
|
American moviemakers and studio executives have always been slower to respond to social unrest, perhaps out of fear that controversy will scare away audiences. |
|
But they dug into the details, and their audiences expected them to be conversant in details. |
|
Harry Potter got there first and the ker-ching of cash registers the world over proved audiences had a taste for fantasy and magic, wizards and elves. |
|
First, movies serve as our most influential history teachers, reaching and swaying audiences that the professional historian cannot even dream of. |
|
But the language about public schools and cricket bewildered audiences and Frank Rich gave it a stinking review. |
|
History records that Paganini stunned audiences with his playing and wild looks, further reinforcing the myth that he had made a pact with the Devil in return for such talent. |
|
But it was too late, as critics and audiences had already written it off once the show failed to dazzle them from the outset. |
|
The Bachelor had debuted a year earlier, and audiences were ripe for a show that punctured its saccharine fairy-tale storyline. |
|
|
It lost money despite the studio's efforts to recut the film so as to overcome aspects of it that had caused preview audiences to reject Huston's original version. |
|
For audiences outside of the Court, the angry and aggressive approach that Murphy decries might be particularly effective. |
|
Pryor had yet to become the volatile social satirist who unnerved white industry executives and delighted black audiences. |
|
Following the traditional fairy tale of Sleeping Beauty and with the musical score by Tchaikovsky, the performance is certain to enchant audiences of all ages. |
|
Jones became obsessed with regality, parading around Paris in dress uniform, taking audiences with Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette, and courting French debutantes. |
|
Austin Rayner entertained cinema audiences at the Regal in Piccadilly, as he sat astride the huge Wurlitzer organ when it appeared from beneath the floor in the intervals. |
|
New museums open with regularity, attracting more audiences. |
|
The too objective script leaves audiences not knowing whether Madeleine was a murderess or not, and this fact contributed to the film's failure on release. |
|
Since then, artists have reveled in symbol-laden dream scenarios, and audiences looking for clues to the human experience have lapped them up eagerly. |
|
He quickly established an accessible, repeatable operatic formula, combining situation comedy plots with the frequent arias demanded by his audiences. |
|
Sadly, modern TV executives are more worried about holding zapping audiences and ratings figures than about television as an arts and culture source. |
|
The racy programming has not just got audiences into a lather. |
|
And though they were often derided as long-haired layabouts, they actually worked extraordinarily hard to conquer new territories and win over new audiences. |
|
Hexagon, where she endeared herself to Japanese audiences for giving ridiculously answers to trivia questions. |
|
They're supposed to give audiences hope and enlighten them while promoting positive emotions. |
|
Fresh from wowing audiences from Belfast to Brazil, Pauline Goldsmith arrives with Bright Colours Only, her smash-hit show that resurrects the Irish wake tradition. |
|
In front of rapt audiences he would burn his skin with acid and then anoint the wounds with his wonder-jelly, pointing to earlier scars Vaseline had healed. |
|
The Musical, a spoof of the erotica novel, played to sold-out audiences in New York and New Jersey this weekend. |
|
For one thing, a car that moves on its own no longer dazzles audiences. |
|
The exhibition has both fascinated and revolted its audiences. |
|
|
Whereas Bitzer suggests that the rhetor discovers exigencies that already exist, Vatz argues that exigencies are created for audiences through the rhetor's work. |
|
He explains why so many studios are channeling their resources into big, special-effects-driven fantasies with licensable characters and targeted at juvenile audiences. |
|
Radio, digital and satellite listeners in the UK and local radio station audiences in Africa will simultaneously hear and be able to engage with broadcasts. |
|
But Cruz and Paul are speaking to significantly different audiences, despite being wacko birds of a feather. |
|
He practices directing as antithetically and abusively to the author's intentions as perversely possible, reaping kudos from benighted reviewers and audiences alike. |
|
Beyond large bank accounts, Silicon Valley's leaders have massive audiences of people at their fingertips. |
|
His mockery of bourgeois values and high society, both of which he rose above through personality and style, illuminated the dandy's appeal to Depression-era audiences. |
|
Performances provide another such context as audiences are brought together in a heightened awareness of sharing patterns of embodied apperception. |
|
Some content during this event may not be appropriate for all audiences. |
|
To judge from the roars of approval on opening night, audiences will be finding new visual marvels to savor in this production for many years to come. |
|
It turns out audiences will forgive such reports when your movies are good. |
|
For this reason, Republican politicians seeking to reach black audiences would do well to forgo formal speeches. |
|
Rather than be instructional or cautionary, the show turns its subjects into feasting zoo objects for audiences to gawk at. |
|
The film can be seen in a lot of independent art-house cinemas and has drawn a good response from audiences, especially in the wake of its awards success. |
|
This vision is of a rich web of linked information, with markup allowing machines to route relevant information to the audiences that value it most. |
|
Traditional British pop audiences tend to look askance at child stars. |
|
One reason younger audiences have not yet embraced the videos may be that the shtick feels stale. |
|
Some audiences become audibly uncomfortable whilst watching this film. |
|
I never understood the screaming hysteria, swooning, and sobbing that seem conventional behaviour for thronging female audiences at big rock concerts. |
|
As everyone here will know, audiences for television are falling. |
|
|
There is a wealth of entertainment and enlightenment in the many programmes for niche audiences, ranging from gardening and cookery to archaeology, wildlife, and art. |
|
His meals begin with breakfast at 8am, after which he goes to his study for two hours of reading and writing, followed by two hours of formal audiences before lunch. |
|
No other of the Enlightened Despots was more fond than Gustav of the time-wasting rituals of court life, the levees, formal audiences and ceremonial entries and exits. |
|
They have larger auditoriums, larger audiences, and larger runs. |
|
Elsewhere in the world, when autocratic or undemocratic regimes have passed away, audiences for foreign radio always go into steep decline as the local media improve. |
|
Even before the acclaimed Irish dance company Riverdance takes the floor of the Shanghai Grand Stage, the principal dancers have already won over Shanghai audiences. |
|
The latest pop single is avalanching the radio stations and it will be presented to wider audiences on Wednesday at the National Palace of Culture. |
|
Right Bed, Wrong Husband is a production which assures steady laughs, from beginning to end, spiced with the bacchanal elements that local audiences love so well. |
|
Instead of actors following scripts in a studio, audiences can see people very like themselves plotting and scheming for advantage in any setting imaginable. |
|
Yet I can never escape the feeling that Gingrich is spoofing his audiences when he engages in these culture war tirades. |
|
How much might such spirited competitions pique the interest of stateside TV audiences? |
|
The orchestra seats, now inaccessible to audiences, were removed along with the Wonder Organ. |
|
Dutch National Ballet ended its third visit to the Edinburgh International Festival with a finale that sent up earnest audiences for classical music and ballet. |
|
As an undergraduate in wartime Oxford he played Angelo in Measure for Measure and in 1951 excited Stratford audiences as Prince Hal and Henry V in the Shakespearian tetralogy. |
|
Though she sings in her native Bambara, her fame until now has been among western audiences who could not understand the often controversial messages in her songs. |
|
By running now, they would risk revealing their inexperience or tying themselves in too many Tea Party knots for future audiences. |
|
Under the leadership of builder Andy Little, they teamed up and presented a Full Monty-style show, baring all in front of two sell-out audiences of women. |
|
He knows audiences expect it, crave it, and gives them the bare bones, in a sometimes naturalistic, sometimes stylised mixture of English, French, Chinese and Japanese. |
|
There was perhaps an assumption that the explicitness of some of the play's scenes, and the baseness of its religious characters, would outrage conservative Irish audiences. |
|
The trend is to more segmentation and offerings to special audiences. |
|
|
He has brought with him a support team of 60 people as well as props that fill seven trucks, Gallup promised Chinese audiences two hours of excitement and thrills. |
|
This ending, however, is unlikely to please gay audiences, and none of it should please audiences of either sexuality with any taste and discrimination. |
|
Interspersing songs with humorous anecdotes in which his bawdy humor and racy wit come into play, audiences never know what's going to happen when Kan Kan takes to the stage. |
|
But the Dalai Lama, who is the recognised leader of Tibetan Buddhism, is careful not to drown his audiences in too many technical Buddhist concepts. |
|
Tickets for the play's 24 performances sold out in less than two days, the majority of them bought by one of the youngest audiences the theatre can recall. |
|
Finally, however, her mellifluous voice with its distinctive accent and timbre began captivating the hearts of audiences elsewhere, and she shot to fame. |
|
Ideas merchandised to one of the largest TV audiences of the entire year. |
|
Director Christopher Nolan gave movie-going audiences an enormous amount of credit with this labyrinthine thriller. |
|
He offended sensitive members of the staff and press with arrogant quips about artists and audiences, but he revitalised an elderly board and ran a tight set of budgets. |
|
This paper explores how multivocal appeals, meaning appeals that have distinct meanings to different audiences, work with respect to religious language. |
|
The fact that most audiences end up feeling some degree of sympathy for Mother Courage irritated Brecht to no end. |
|
For starters, most of the antislavery content dropped out of the stage shows as producers concentrated on elaborate set pieces that could entertain or enthrall audiences. |
|
Catherine Wyn-Rogers, one of Britain's most acclaimed mezzo-sopranos and much loved by Proms audiences, sings Sir Edward Elgar's ravishing Sea Pictures. |
|
Top gymnasts, acrobats and trampolinists from France and Russia are entertaining enthusiastic audiences during their current exhibition tour across France. |
|
She introduced the tiny jewel to Western audiences from behind a wash of magenta fringe. |
|
As his costume split its seams, audiences split their sides. |
|
Filling in their sound with a bevy of horns, keyboards and synthesizers, the explosive troupe leaves a larger than life impression on their audiences. |
|
He made a film the critics trashed and the audiences ignored. |
|
Most of this was in vaudeville, where black casts replaced black-faced ones and performed the minstrel show songs and dances to delighted white audiences. |
|
Rumors are swirling that Pope Francis is ill after the Vatican canceled all his July audiences and daily Mass. |
|
|
I thought Edinburgh Fringe audiences were way beyond shockability. |
|
Like a lot of modern audiences, those people are selling themselves short. |
|
Despite his critics' concerns, the character is funny, with real satirical bite, and remains hugely popular with young black and white audiences alike. |
|
He was an actor who dared to tread the boards at the York Theatre Royal in the 18th century, when it was known to host one of the most raucous and truculent audiences around. |
|
The question audiences of Queen of the Night will face is whether they want to be unmasked and, ultimately, to be seen. |
|
Test audiences found the original ending too morose and wanted to see Alex get blown away. |
|
Thespians from the North Kerry area are set to tread the boards yet again in what promises to be a side-splitting feast of comedy drama for audiences. |
|
Every week they dress up in dinner jackets and black ties to visit old people's homes and sing old and well-loved songs to their delighted audiences. |
|
It amazed audiences at its first appearances at Western air shows in the 1990s with aerobatic manoeuvres previously unknown for a twin-engined jet aircraft its size. |
|
He was one of the first great modern day ad-libbers, unleashing all-out joke assaults on unsuspecting audiences. |
|
His back catalogue of songs confirms his reputation as one of the country's most accomplished singer-songwriters who can command huge audiences in his own right. |
|
Interpreting the text in the light of humours reduces the amount of plot attributed to chance by modern audiences. |
|
The move shocked audiences, who inundated CBS with angry letters. |
|
He believed American audiences were ready for a thriller set in Africa. |
|
The trap with Harold's work, for performers and audiences, is to approach it too earnestly or portentously. |
|
You little muSoft goons should learn about FAQs before you bogotify yourselves in front of large audiences. |
|
Meanwhile, giant palaces were built for the huge audiences that wanted to see Hollywood films. |
|
Romantic art addressed its audiences with what was intended to be felt as the personal voice of the artist. |
|
Reality TV really is appealing to the lowest common denominator in audiences. |
|
Webinars provide them with a new way to reach audiences and generate income. |
|