music-hall in English

noun
1
a theater where musical events are staged.
While a coup d'état storms the streets, two Russian actors try to make an entertaining performance in a music hall theatre.
noun

Use "music-hall" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "music-hall" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "music-hall", or refer to the context using the word "music-hall" in the English Dictionary.

1. Nothing's like music hall.

2. Concord Music Hall & Freestyle Forever Present

3. A Buxom woman sat at the piano banging out popular music hall tunes

4. I looked a cross between a music- hall comedian and a cheap bookie.

5. The music-hall and vaudeville were transitional as really was all nineteenth-century popular culture.

6. Carman, born Carmelo Licciardello in Trenton, was inducted into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame in 2018

7. A member of the Christian Music Hall of Fame, Acappella spreads the gospel all over the world.

8. Theatre, music hall, concert, entertainer, ballroom, nightclub, discotheque, aquatic recreation, complex, amusement arcade, funfair and theme park services

9. 24 Her latest project is a film based on the life of a nineteenth-century music hall star.

10. Originally a music hall, then converted to a playhouse, the venue was transformed into Bam Rose Cinemas in 1998

11. Discotheque, music-hall, variety show services, agency services and production of shows and parties, amusements, entertainment, theatre productions and animation

12. ‘Blighty’ became hugely popular, used in advertisements, music hall songs, and even as the title of a humorous magazine for servicemen

13. A more fundamental objection has been that music-hall and vaudeville were essentially controlled by showmen who were of course entrepreneurs.

14. As a 1950s comic who also sang, Carroll bridged the music hall Comediennes of the past and the female stand-ups of the present

15. GMA Gospel Music Hall of Fame member and Christian trailblazer Carman Dominic Licciardello, better known as Carman, died at a Las Vegas, Nevada, hospital on Tuesday

16. The hectic social schedule gave him a fresh lease of life and he entertained visitors with crisp anecdotes, risque jokes and renditions of old music hall songs.

17. But what, you may ask, do a Polish poet, a British Dame, a country music hall of famer all have in common besides this totally excellent Google ranking?

18. The evenings are fully devoted to fun, pleasure and socialisation with music hall, comedies, games, and dancing in the amphitheatre or live music shows in the American bar.

19. ‘predictable jeers, Buffooneries, and cheap shots’ ‘The humour of Pimple films derived from theatrical burlesque, music-hall satire and from a tradition of buffoonery that embraced such infantilised characters as …

20. He made his first public appearance in Vaudeville in 1907 at New York's Clinton Music Hall, then became a member of the Gus Edwards Gang, later touring vaudeville with Lila Lee as the team Cantor …

21. Their popularity is reflected in the well-known British music hall song, "My Old Man (Said Follow the Van)", in the line, "I walked behind wiv me old cock linnet..." referring to the linnet (Carduelis cannabina).

22. Senior idol competition and 2020 nominees - the east coast music hall of fame in the category of vocal group/Acappella! The Tribunes are a legendary 5-man Acappella group specializing in the performance of vocal music fr

23. The Cancan is regarded today primarily as a music hall dance, performed by a chorus line of female dancers who wear costumes with long skirts, petticoats, and black stockings, harking back to the fashions of the 1890’s

24. Ostanek - Accordionally Yours Canada's Polka King, Three Time Grammy® Award Winner, International Polka Music Hall of Fame®, This is a Grammy® Winning CD album, special guests are: accordion great Joey Miskulin, Gaylord Klancnik, Dick Tady and more

25. ‘A Buxom woman sat at the piano banging out popular music hall tunes.’ ‘Pictures of Buxom women on ballads could be a selling point for a male audience - and a female one too if the pictures actually described the latest fashions.’

26. ‘It's got sex, violence, Absurdism, politics (including a wicked parody of Western European and American leaders) and lots and lots of drugs.’ ‘Trading in a unique mix of Absurdism and knowingly ancient music hall puns and wheezes, slapstick, cross-talk and gentle …

27. James Dobbs (1781-1837) is the man in question – a popular music hall performer of the era – and we know that he first performed ‘I Can’t Find Brummagem’ at the Theatre Royal on New Street (roughly where Bella Italia currently stands) in 1828.

28. Bigamist, card sharp, prison escapee and faker of his own death are just some of the epithets attached to Nat Clifford, who was more favourably remembered as an acrobat, music-hall entertainer, writer and silent-movie actor until his death in 1948.

29. "Abdul ABulbul Amir" is the most common name for a music-hall song written in 1877 (during the Russo-Turkish War) under the title "Abdulla Bulbul Ameer" by Percy French, and subsequently altered and popularized by a variety of other writers and performers.

30. A thriving suburb just 11 miles northwest of Philadelphia, Ardmore is a commercial hub home to the popular Suburban Square, an open-air mall with upscale retailers, casual eateries, and a farmers market open every day of the week.Nearby you’ll find abundant local restaurants and cafes, the Ardmore Music Hall, car dealerships, supermarkets, and more.

31. ‘His characters - Bosomy girls, nagging wives, henpecked husbands and red-nosed drunks - had long been the stock clichés of the music hall and early source material for the Carry On films.’ ‘A life-long penciller of rippling muscles and Bosomy babes, he casually refers to Hamlet, Irving Berlin and Ira Gershwin as he describes a life's

32. ‘His characters - Bosomy girls, nagging wives, henpecked husbands and red-nosed drunks - had long been the stock clichés of the music hall and early source material for the Carry On films.’ ‘A life-long penciller of rippling muscles and Bosomy babes, he casually refers to Hamlet, Irving Berlin and Ira Gershwin as he describes a life's

33. 1891, originally "number of strokes a good player is supposed to need for a given hole or course;" later, "score one over par" (1946); from the same source as Bogey (n.1), on the notion of a "phantom" opponent, represented by the "ground score." The word was in vogue at the time in Britain through the popularity of a music-hall tune "Hush, Hush, Hush, Here Comes the