The stage was still empty, although the theatre was full, and the whole house was almost in darkness, for what little light there was came through the dusty panes of a window at the back of the stage.
Alvaro Pena, the Greek orator, more indignant than anybody, finally went up to the gallery and put Mechacar out of the theatre by force, amid the applause of the public.
In a few minutes there was hardly anybody in the theatre but women.
Hence her terror and dismay every time she appeared at the theatreor promenade overwhelmed her with confusion.
They certainly struck him as splendid, and the theatre a marvel of luxury and good taste.
Then you must know that in this provincial theatre the same dramas and comedies were played as in the capital, and the same operas given as at La Scala in Milan.
Many others, who seldom missed a melodrama at the Hanbridge Theatre Royal, avoided operas by virtue of the infallible instinct which caused them to recoil from anything exotic enough to disturb the calm of their lifelong mental lethargy.
Moreover, they hired the Hanbridge Theatre Royal for six nights.
They were late in arriving at the theatre because the cab could not get through Piccadilly, and Harry was impatiently expecting them in the foyer.
They are ready enough to take pleasure in a spectacle, but they are prejudiced against taking the theatre as a guide for life.
On that day the aeroplanes were to move, by air, first to Dover, and thence, on the sixth day, to the field base in the theatre of war.
This redistribution of the rolling stock, together with the apparent reduction in motor transport, would seem to point to some important movement away from this immediate theatre being in contemplation.
Zelphine reminded her that as we drove by thetheatre in the morning we had noticed a poster announcing that a grand opera was to be given in Cava that evening.
Milton's "Shade above shade, a woody theatre Of stateliest view," we found that most of the fine trees which once adorned the ascent had been ruthlessly destroyed.
Attired in a dress-coat, he arrived in the theatre where the eternal "Dame aux Camelias" was being played.
Nekhludoff understood that the only purpose for which she had brought him to the theatre was to display her evening toilet with her shoulders and mole, and he was both pleased and disgusted.
On leaving, she told him that she was always ready to be of service to him, and asked him to visit her at the theatre the next day, if only for a minute, saying that she wished to have a talk with him on a matter of importance.
That one in the theatre also smiled that way when I entered," he thought, "and the smile of the former conveyed the same meaning as that of the latter.
The theatre was a rude wooden enclosure open to the sky, with the exception of a portion roofed over for a band of musicians, whose noisy performances appeared to constitute an important element in the proceedings.
I witnessed part of a dramatic performance at a Burmese Theatre in Calcutta (during the Exhibition year), when the story of the Hindu Epic, called Ramaya[n.
The after-theatre crowd was beginning to come in; the sound of laughter and talk grew steadily higher; far off an orchestra wailed inarticulately.
A lot of people thought that I followed him all the way to the Texas Theatre and pointed him out in the theatre.
In fact, you were looking for this man who later turned out to be Oswald, in this parking lot which was some distance from the Texas Theatre at that point?
The Lord Chamberlain's Company, that of Shakespeare, was playing in Henslowe's theatre at Newington Butts.
With the freedom of the theatre Will could soar to all heights and plumb all depths.
The memories of ancient people of the theatre and clerks and sextons at Stratford were ransacked, to very little purpose.
He "received" so much, on each occasion, when they were acted in a theatre of his.
If only this be not the gorgeous theatre dressed by my hand for my own martyrdom!
We have noticed that my brother comes to the theatre only when Tullia dances there; he applauds the steps of this creature, and then goes out.
Accordingly, to the theatre we went; actually got somewhat tipsy, as we reflected on the hazardous nature of our enterprise, and coming back about midnight, proceeded directly to our chamber.
It is the most beautiful theatre on the Atlantic sea-board.
In the evening Barbara and I would meet in our Bloomsbury flat, and go out to dinner, generally to a foreign restaurant, and sometimes afterwards to a theatre or a music hall, the latter being always of Barbara's choosing.
That same night Jack Sainsbury was on his way home in a taxi from the theatre with Elise.
It occurred to an inquiring mind here and there that if the representation of men's action and passion on the theatre could be made interesting, there was no good reason why the great drama of history should be dull as a miracle-play.
Here was a tragedy fulfilling the demands of Aristotle, and purifying with an instantaneous throb of pity and terror a theatre of such proportions as the world never saw.
When the time drew near for the attempt, he himself accompanied Nikaea to the theatre to hear Amoebeus sing.
Upon this they fell to abusing one another, and kept the theatrein confusion.
From her earliest years she was trained for the ballet, and made her appearance at the Karntner-Thor theatre in Vienna before she was seven.
But as lessee of the Surrey theatre he acted almost up to his death, which was hastened by intemperance.
Gardyne, Theatre of Scottish Worthies and Lyf of W.
This theatre appears to have been entirely covered with marble, although only a few fragments remain.
This is a vast circular theatre hewn out of the solid rock, consisting of thirty-three seats of stone sloping upwards, and surmounted, and in some degree sheltered, by the rocks above.
Near the theatre are several pedestals of statues; one records a citizen of great merit and magnificence.
There was a magnificent theatre also built of stone, but cased with marble, and greatly enriched with sculptures.
The hill supplied marble, while its slope afforded a place for the seats rising gradually above each other in the stadium, or the great theatre for the exhibition of games.
The theatreis almost in its entire state; and although the notes were made upon the spot, did not enable Dr.
A greater portion of the theatre remains than of any other Roman monument.
And the theatre seemed to the men in that country highly ridiculous, just as it does to me; but whereas the Celts were a few ridiculing many, I here along with a few others seem absurd in every way to all of you.
Therefore let no priest enter a theatre or have an actor or a chariot-driver for his friend; and let no dancer or mime even approach his door.
And even when I do enter the theatre I look like a man who is expiating a crime.
Music they cherished with especial care: it gave splendor to the celebration of high mass in chapel or cathedral; it afforded an innocent and refined recreation, in the theatre and concert-room, to the Electors and their guests.
I want to see the place in full blast, just as the after-theatre crowd is coming in.
Most of the cars that are stolen," explained McBirney, "are taken from the automobile district, which embraces also not a small portion of the new Tenderloin and the theatre district.
You appear to be much absorbed, my venerable Spartan," says I to the General, as I handled the diaphanous vessel he was using as an act-drop in the theatre of war.
So it reads at least in Frederick Schiller's new piece, the one given at the theatre a short time ago.
He had also sent his "Fiesco" to the director of the theatre at Leipsic, and this gentleman had now returned it with a polite letter of refusal.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "theatre" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: drama; hall; house; theatre