Sentences with phrase «modern stage hands»

The book - keeper was a member of the company of players who was responsible for the promptbooks — what would be known by modern stage hands as the playbook — and shared many of the responsibilities of a modern stage manager.

Not exact matches

However, this was tempered by the fact that we somehow managed to exit at the hands of the mighty Walsall at Highbury in the very next round — the modern day equivalent of, say, staging a stirring comeback after going four goals down to Reading, only to lose to Bradford in the next round.
In one of the core texts that many modern stage magicians read while in training, Professor Hoffmann's Modern Magic, the wand is described as an ideal prop for distracting the eyes, for granting an excuse to close the hand and hide something within it, and to provide the illusion of having real magical modern stage magicians read while in training, Professor Hoffmann's Modern Magic, the wand is described as an ideal prop for distracting the eyes, for granting an excuse to close the hand and hide something within it, and to provide the illusion of having real magical Modern Magic, the wand is described as an ideal prop for distracting the eyes, for granting an excuse to close the hand and hide something within it, and to provide the illusion of having real magical power.
Now in the hands of the experts at Land Rover Classic, it will take the stage alongside its closest modern relative — the exclusive 331 kW Defender Works V8 revealed earlier this year.
On the other hand if you want to go for the more traditional female Sonic character in Modern Sonic's stages, here's Amy Rose too.
The Avatar stages, on the other hand, are a mix of modern and classic styles, which I enjoyed the most, since they allow for elements of exploration within a stage as well as some sections of speed.
One thing I truly enjoy about the avatar and Modern Sonic's stages, or at least in the 3D segments, is the sheer amount of multiple pathways there are, no matter how convoluted they may seem.There are also stages where both the avatar and Modern Sonic run along side each other, which opens up the multiple pathways even more, and instead of switching a character out, each of their moves is assigned to a specific button, making them act as one character, which take some getting used to due to the visual appearance of both characters appearing on screen, but is definitely optimal.There's also some level designs with certain gimmicks: at one point you're playing pinball in the middle of a bright forest with classic Sonic, and in that same forest, you'll be playing pinball with some enemies down a water slide with the avatar, were the control starts to get kind of out of hand, while Modern Sonic will face a boss that combines the level design from Lost World with this game's boost mechanics, which was probably the intention for the departure in the 2013 game.
Cueva de El Castillo, Puente Viesgo, Spain Panel of Hands, photo: Pedro Saura Cueva de El Castillo, Panel of Hands, photo: Pedro Saura Cueva de El Castillo, Corridor of Disks, photo: Pedro Saura Hologram, Museo Nacional de Altamira, Santillana del Mar, Spain, photo: Estudio Nómada Inside Conellante, Matienzo, Spain, 2010, photo: Randee Silv El Pendo, entrance, 2010, photo: Randee Silv Pech Merle, Cabrerets, France, photo: Steve Errede, Dept. of Physics, University of Illinois Airbrushing, photo: Don Hitchcock, Don's Maps Finger Flutings, Grotte de Rouffignac, France, photo: Kevin Sharpe & Leslie Van Gelder Untitled, Alice Rahon, 1945, watercolor, 10 x 8», photo: Creighton - Davis GallerY L'Enclume, Wolfgang Paalen, 1952, oil & fumage, 53 x 74», photo: Artsy.net Message, No. 8, Mathias Goeritz, 1959, gold paint, perforated steel, pushpins on board, photo: Arevalo Gallery Conference Poster 1950, Willi Baumeister, Centro de Arte Riena Sofia, Madrid, photo: Randee Silv Altamira, Joan Miró, 1958, lithograph, photo: Quittenbaum Auction House, Munich Joan Miró & Josep Llorens Artigas, Altamira, 1957, photo: Fundación Botín, Santander, Spain Patterns of Aranjuez, 1955, N. H. Stubbing, oil on canvas, 78 x 69 ″, photo: England & Co, London Cave of Black, Herman Cherry, 1954, enamel / coffee grinds on canvas, 61 x49 ″, David Findlay Gallery, photo: Randee Silv Untitled, Denny Winters, 1982, photo: Gamage Auction House, Rockland, Maine Before the Caves, Helen Frankenthaler, 1958, oil on unprimed canvas, 102 x 104 ″, photo: Berkeley Art Museum The Homely Protestant, Robert Motherwell, 1946, oil on masonite, 98 X 48 ″, photo: Metropolitian Museum Cave Study (Perigord Region), Elaine de Kooning 1983, segment, photo: Artvalue.com Lascaux Cave, France, closeup of Megalaceros section, photo: Wikimedia commons Untitled 1963, David Smith, spray enamel on paper, 14 x 19 ″, photo: David Smith Estate Chauvet Cave, Vallon - Pont - d'Arc, France, photo: Dr. Jean Clottes Exhibition poster, Miguel Barceló, Institut Valencià d'Art Modern, 1995 photo: Michel Fillon Gallery, Paris Stages of Trance, photo: David Lewis - Williams, Inside the Neolithic Mind Pareidolia, Conellante Cave, 2010, Matienzo, Spain, photo: Randee Silv Blackness, Conellante Cave, 2010, Matienzo, Spain, photo: Randee Silv
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z