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harlequinades Meaning in Bengali



একটি চাষা বা ভাঁড় মত অভিনয়

Noun:

মুক নাটকের যে অংশে মুক অভিনেতার বা চরিত্রে প্রাধান্য থাকে,





harlequinades's Usage Examples:

In English versions, harlequinades differed in two important respects from the Commedia original.


no longer featured in mainstream British drama, but it resurfaced in harlequinades, pantomimes and melodramas in the 19th century.


stage business connected with the character Harlequin in 19th-century harlequinades.


extensively, alone or in collaboration, notably parodies, bouffonneries and harlequinades.


England popularising the role of Harlequin in Georgian pantomimes and harlequinades in the early part of the 1800s at the Sadler's Wells and Covent Garden.


comedian and dancer, who frequently played the role of Clown in the harlequinades that accompanied nineteenth-century pantomimes.


He performed several times as the clown in pantomimes and harlequinades before cultivating a reputation for playing the ‘man-monkey’.


twelve harlequinades a year.


In 1799, Dibdin was offered a contract by the Sadler's Wells manager Richard Hughes to write pantomimes and harlequinades for.


performance activity in its auditorium: pantomimes, plays, comedies, harlequinades and opera.


were another draw for the Parisian middle classes: "Vaudeville and harlequinades are offered all over the garden," a contemporary journalist remarked.


Together with Theodore Komisarjevsky, he staged a number of "harlequinades" and "monodramas" as part of his new project, "The Merry Theatre for.


grandfather, also named Fred Evans, was a popular clown who staged harlequinades; his uncle Will Evans was a leading music hall comedian; and his parents.


learning of parts and rehearsal for the heavily improvised farces and harlequinades that then dominated the German stage.


Offenbach was licensed to put on "harlequinades, pantomimes, comic scenes, conjuring tricks, dances, shadow shows, puppet.


fairly regularly in English pantomimes (which were originally mute harlequinades but later evolved into the Christmas pantomimes of today; in the nineteenth.



harlequinades's Meaning':

acting like a clown or buffoon

Synonyms:

buffoonery; japery; schtick; shtick; clowning; lunacy; tomfoolery; indulgence; folly; shtik; schtik; foolery; prank; craziness; frivolity;

Antonyms:

sanity; unpermissiveness; discipline; wisdom; intelligence;

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