释义 |
Definition of stock company in English: stock companynoun North American A repertory company that is largely based in one theatre. 〈美〉(在固定剧院上演保留剧目的)专业剧团 Example sentencesExamples - He had a longstanding stock company of actors (which included his mother), who crop up repeatedly.
- His loyalty to the surviving members of his old stock company is typical of his essential warm-heartedness.
- Throughout the classical system, Hollywood studios have stock companies.
- He once again gathered many of his stock company of performers around him.
- Sean and Richard had sat one night, reminiscing about the days of Shakespeare, when actors would form a stock company and stick together through thick or thin.
- Away from larger eastern cities, smaller troupes circulated or attempted lesser stock companies.
- She worked at the same stock company as Matt, and evidently did very well for herself.
- Theatre work in stock companies led to hundreds of appearances on early 1950's TV programs, followed by his casting opposite Holliday in ‘It Should Happen To You’.
- Whereas stars were associated with sure-fire old plays and revivals, especially Shakespeare, stock companies offered new plays, and especially melodrama, in order to compete.
- But his stock company is also made up of absolutely compelling performances, acting that really makes the mad amount of information and counter-attack seem that much more believable and understandable.
- While stars and character actors are permanent members of stock companies, extras are freelance and hired through the Central Casting Corporation, formed in 1925.
- Under the stock system, the director initially controlled casting, selecting leads from his stock company and extras from anyone who appeared at studio ‘bull-pens.’
- To handle the greater demand, film companies could no longer rely on the casual and intermittent use of actors for individual films and so created permanent stock companies of actors.
- He envisions a predominantly ‘elite’ audience in the stock companies in the Northeast of the USA in the first decennia of the nineteenth century, who abandoned the theatres for opera in the 1830s because of the star system.
- Veteran stalwarts of the Ford stock company, they played major roles as the unsaintly parish priest Father Lonergan and the blustering squireen Red Will Danaher.
- It had interviews but it also had sketches, stunts, games, lots of music, a stock company of comedy players and even (for a time) a real newscast.
- He ‘discovered’ him and added him to his stock company of comic players.
- He had already done ‘The Maltese Falcon,’ but he had to do whatever Warners wanted, just like the rest of us in the stock company.
- The exalted Johnny initially had a little stock company of comedy players for sketches, and a weekly department where he'd go out with a film crew and do some stunt like auto racing or skydiving.
- This is a documentary about him, his early life and works, and his Dreamland stock company.
Definition of stock company in US English: stock companynounstäk ˈkəmp(ə)nēstɑk ˈkəmp(ə)ni North American A repertory company that is largely based in one theater. 〈美〉(在固定剧院上演保留剧目的)专业剧团 Example sentencesExamples - Away from larger eastern cities, smaller troupes circulated or attempted lesser stock companies.
- Veteran stalwarts of the Ford stock company, they played major roles as the unsaintly parish priest Father Lonergan and the blustering squireen Red Will Danaher.
- He ‘discovered’ him and added him to his stock company of comic players.
- It had interviews but it also had sketches, stunts, games, lots of music, a stock company of comedy players and even (for a time) a real newscast.
- She worked at the same stock company as Matt, and evidently did very well for herself.
- Whereas stars were associated with sure-fire old plays and revivals, especially Shakespeare, stock companies offered new plays, and especially melodrama, in order to compete.
- He had already done ‘The Maltese Falcon,’ but he had to do whatever Warners wanted, just like the rest of us in the stock company.
- Under the stock system, the director initially controlled casting, selecting leads from his stock company and extras from anyone who appeared at studio ‘bull-pens.’
- Sean and Richard had sat one night, reminiscing about the days of Shakespeare, when actors would form a stock company and stick together through thick or thin.
- While stars and character actors are permanent members of stock companies, extras are freelance and hired through the Central Casting Corporation, formed in 1925.
- He once again gathered many of his stock company of performers around him.
- This is a documentary about him, his early life and works, and his Dreamland stock company.
- Throughout the classical system, Hollywood studios have stock companies.
- Theatre work in stock companies led to hundreds of appearances on early 1950's TV programs, followed by his casting opposite Holliday in ‘It Should Happen To You’.
- But his stock company is also made up of absolutely compelling performances, acting that really makes the mad amount of information and counter-attack seem that much more believable and understandable.
- His loyalty to the surviving members of his old stock company is typical of his essential warm-heartedness.
- He envisions a predominantly ‘elite’ audience in the stock companies in the Northeast of the USA in the first decennia of the nineteenth century, who abandoned the theatres for opera in the 1830s because of the star system.
- He had a longstanding stock company of actors (which included his mother), who crop up repeatedly.
- The exalted Johnny initially had a little stock company of comedy players for sketches, and a weekly department where he'd go out with a film crew and do some stunt like auto racing or skydiving.
- To handle the greater demand, film companies could no longer rely on the casual and intermittent use of actors for individual films and so created permanent stock companies of actors.
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