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 A dancer who takes part in a ballet.  Something actors and actresses put on their faces to change their appearances.  The part of a theatre/cinema.

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Presentation on theme: " A dancer who takes part in a ballet.  Something actors and actresses put on their faces to change their appearances.  The part of a theatre/cinema."— Presentation transcript:

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2  A dancer who takes part in a ballet.  Something actors and actresses put on their faces to change their appearances.  The part of a theatre/cinema where the audience sits.  A funny or light play in the theatre.  A large area inside the theatre/cinema where people meet or wait, walk in the interval.  A sad or serious play in the theatre.

3  Someone who leads a group of music players or singers.  A person whose job is to design things by making drawings of them.  A very famous and popular actor/actress.  Something that helps you to see the actor and the stage better.  A group of actors appearing in a particular performance.  A room where a performer can get dressed.

4  The sides of the stage which the audience cannot see because of curtains and scenery.  Everything that is on the stage to give an impression of the place where the play (ballet, opera) is happening.

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6 “Not just theatre but the capital at its very best.” Sunday Telegraph

7 The Globe Theatre,which officially opened in 1997, is a faithful reconstruction of the open-air playhouse first built in 1599, where Shakespeare worked and for which he wrote many of his greatest plays.

8 Shakespeare's company erected the storied Globe Theatre in 1598 in London's Bankside district. It was one of four major theatres in the area.

9 The open-air, octagonal amphitheater rose three stories high with a diameter of approximately 100 feet, holding a seating capacity of up to 3,000 spectators. The rectangular stage platform on which the plays were performed was nearly 43 feet wide and 28 feet deep. This staging area probably housed trap doors in its flooring and primitive rigging overhead for various stage effects. In 1613, the original Globe Theatre burned to the ground.

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11 The new theatre on Bankside is approximately 230 metres (750 ft) from the original site, centre to centre, and was the first thatched roof building permitted in London since the Great Fire of London in 1666. The theatre opened in 1997 under the name "Shakespeare's Globe Theatre" and now stages plays every summer. Mark Rylance was appointed as the first artistic director in 1995 and was succeeded by Dominic Dromgoole In 2006.

12 As in the original Globe, the theatre has a thrust stage that projects into a large circular yard surrounded by three tiers of steeply raked seating.

13 Each year the theatre season runs from April or May to October with productions of the work by Shakespeare and modern authors, and plays to an audience of 350,000 who experience the ‘wooden O’ sitting in a gallery or standing as a groundling in the yard, just as they would have done 400 years ago.

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15  A film about space travel or life in an imaginary future  A film about criminals and detectives  A film with lots of music and dance  A film about cowboys and life in the Wild West  A funny film with a happy ending  A film in which mysterious and frightening things happen  A musical  A western  A comedy  A science fiction film  A crime film  A horror film

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