Audiences at theaters don't want to hear anything they don't already know by heart.
He has delivered it before vastaudiences amid thunders of applause.
But when we'd done we had a song that I sang for many years, and that my audiences still demand from me.
No evening is lang enow to sing all my songs in--all those I've gi'en my friends in my audiences at one time and anither in all these nearly thirty years I've been upon the stage.
I mind, do you ken, the way I've talked to audiences at hame, and in America and Australia, these last twa or three years.
My audiences had made me feel that I was going about the task of pleasing them in the right way.
But later I got over that, and those first audiences of mine did much for me.
It was he had told me not to sing ma Scottish songs--that English audiences were tired o' everything that had to do wi' a kilt or a pair o' brogues!
You've got one of the hardest audiences in the world to please, right in this hall.
Ever since then, in the days when I began to sing, and when my friends in the audiences decided that I should spend my life so instead of working mair with my twa hands, it's been what I knew of men and women that's been of service to me.
American audiences are the friendliest in the world, and the most liberal wi' applause ye could want to find.
Our audiences were large, and they were generous wi' their applause, too, which Scottish audiences sometimes are not.
My audienceswere comin' to know me, and to depend on me.
I know What my audiences like and what they don't.
I've never had audiences that counted for sae much wi' me.
Sometimes I've been surprised at the way my audiences ha' received me.
Today Miss Keller often appears in public and tells to large audiences some of her thoughts and opinions.
He, therefore, began in a modest way to read his poems before audiences in his native state.
I have heard their fierce invectives against the bureaus and ungrateful audiences that were "prejudiced" against them.
Tuning the Strings of Life Many audiences are gathered into this one audience.
Shakespeare Why It Is Printed MORE than a million people have sat in audiences in all parts of the United States and have listened to "The University of Hard Knocks.
That continuous question from audiences brought out this book in response.
Bernhardt, Davis and Edison The spectacle of Sarah Bernhardt, past seventy, thrilling and gripping audiences with the fire and brilliancy of youth, is inspiring.
And I wish I could tell the lecture committees of America how I appreciate the vast amount of altruistic work they have done in bringing the audiences of America together.
For lecture audiencesare not drawn together, they are pushed together.
He liked to talk about the audiences that came to hear him read, and he gave the palm to his Parisian one, saying it was the quickest to catch his meaning.
The audiences are curiously alike, except that the Edinburgh audience has a quicker sense of humor and is a little more genial.
The audiences are never wholly the same, and every Medium has her own peculiar method.
He did not confuse audiences by silly subtleties; Prout represented honest industry, Seneca Doane represented whining laziness, and you could take your choice.
He presided at meetings for the denunciation of unions or the elevation of domestic service, and confided to the audiences that as a poor boy he had carried newspapers.
It has been frequently said by those optimists who are forever discovering the birth of the arts in popular amusements that vaudeville audiences will appreciate and applaud the best.
For the most part, those ancient afterpieces were frankly padding, conventional farces to fill up the bill and send the audiences home happy.
He accepted it promptly, and spoke to enthusiastic audiences in Boston, Worcester, Lynn and Lowell.
His audiences in that State were uniformly large, and his Warren speech was delivered in the afternoon to an enormous crowd, one of the greatest ever called together upon such an occasion in the Western Reserve.
Splendid as was his eloquence at that time, Mr. Bradlaugh did not draw the large audiences that flocked around him a few years later.
From the dramatic point of view, however, it must not be concealed that they were less satisfactory; and that some of them were scarcely so successful with audiences as their author's earlier and humbler efforts.
Theatrical audiences now found their old favourite addressing them again, and occupying new ground as a writer of five act and three act comedies.
Such is the condition to which the dearth of good literature has now reduced the audiences of English theatres--even in the estimation of the men who act before them.
But the increase of wealth and population, and the railway connection between London and the country, more than supply in quantity what audiences have lost in quality.
She became in demand at all of the great English musical festivals and also sang before enormous audiences for years in the great English cities.
American audiences are becoming more and more discriminating.
Upon one occasion my number was followed by that of a very popular comedienne whose performance was known to be of the farcical, rip-roaring type which vaudeville audiences were supposed to like above all things.
Indeed, some of the vaudeville audiences often hear a singer at far better advantage than in the opera house.
Audiences judge by real worth and not by reputation.
Time and again I have achieved some of the best results I have ever secured on the concert stage with delicate intimate works sung before audiences of thousands of people.
The audiences use their imagination all the time, and like romantic songs with an atmospheric background, which accounts for my great success with songs of such type as Lieurance's By the Waters of Minnetonka.
In the West and Northwest I find audiences just as intelligent and as appreciative as in Boston.
This was rather bad news to us, who were going thither to find audiences (if possible not few, whether fit or not), but it was awful to such as were going back to their homes and families.
The people here take more kindly to us than they have done even elsewhere, and it is delightful to act to audiences who appear so pleasantly pleased with us.
Ranting and raving in tragedy, and shrieks of unmeaning laughter in comedy, are not, you know, precisely our style, and I am afraid our audiences here may think us flat.
The audiences are very pleasant, however, and the company by no means bad.
The event fully justified my expectation of far less friendly audiences out of London than those I had hitherto made my appeals to.
Mr. Phillips often spoke of them in his public addresses; they were prominent members of the anti-slavery societies; they themselves frequently appeared before large audiences on public platforms.
From thence they went up the North River with Gerrit Smith, holdingaudiences at Hudson and Poughkeepsie.
He played on those vast audiences of judges, lawyers, ministers, business and working men as Ole Bull played on the violin.
We have now 285 Evangelists, or, as we now call them, Officers, and in many instances they have the largest audiences in the towns where they are at work.
All winter the little ragged audiences gathered around him in the morning; and often at eventime when he retreated into a quiet corner to be silent and rest, he found himself the centre of an inquiring group of his fellow-lodgers.
They're congratulating themselves on an unexpected harvest, as the big audiences for which they cater every morning and afternoon in summer are gone for the day.
He was made a member of the Privy Council, appointed a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St. Michael and St. George, and received in audiences by the Queen.
For many years to come the recollection of his personality has impressed itself upon audiences and upon individuals in every part of Canada will remain to keep his memory green.
Arguments, however, that are written or that are delivered before large audiences cannot be curtailed in this way.
Altogether, ours was a lively and a picturesque procession, and drew crowded audiences to the balconies wherever we went.
Splendid pageants were exhibited here, in presence of the Emperor, the great ministers of State, the nobles, and vast audiences of citizens of smaller consequence.
Dread lord and mighty, crowded audiences have greeted our humble efforts with rapturous applause.
You see, audiences don’t like to be disappointed.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "audiences" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.