troupe 的 2 个定义
- a company, band, or group of singers, actors, or other performers, especially one that travels about.
trouped, troup·ing.
- to travel as a member of a theatrical company; barnstorm.
troupe 近义词
company
更多troupe例句
- Spanish director Joan Font douses this version of the classic story with some playfulness, recruiting his performance troupe Els Comediants to tell the tale as old as time.
- As the audience watches on, the team will prompt the AI to generate a script — which a troupe of actors will then perform, despite never having seen the lines before.
- By 2012, his idea for “The Visitors” had fully developed, and the troupe descended on the house in August.
- What gives the film its greatest appeal, of course, is the chance it affords to see this legendary performance troupe in action.
- Photo captions in an earlier version of this article incorrectly identified the theater troupe in the photographs and the location where the photographs were taken.
- Stephen Colbert, Amy Poehler, Steve Carell, and a host of others got their start with the improv troupe.
- Newman asked the audience, referring to a comedy troupe that preceded Newman.
- He met and married his first wife, Jacqueline Witte, in 1949, when they were members of an acting troupe in Illinois.
- After brief runs in community theater and college, she hit the road with a Renaissance fair troupe.
- It was dark and somewhat stuffy, and it was “home” to a troupe of six.
- There were five men and three women in the circus troupe, and among the four nuns was the grave reverend mother of a convent.
- Toute la nuit ce ne fust que haranguer, chanter, danser; car telle est la vie de toutes ces gens lorsqu'ils sont en troupe.
- He dropped his last name, thinking the Smith Troupe would not sound as well as Homer.
- And there came news that the king was in some gambling house with a troupe of that archfiend's spies.
- The first playhouse, we should remember, was not erected by a troupe of actors, but by a money-seeking individual.