Madcap \Mad"cap`\, n. A person of wild behavior; an excitable, rash, violent person. --Shak.
Real bar girls were brought up from Bangkok to the recreated White Rose, a pilot hangout in Vientiane where the sexual acrobatics were as madcap as the aerial ones.
This madcap four-hour romp could have been written by an 18th-century Mel Brooks, and Mr. McGegan says it has as much appeal for him as Bach, because of Telemann's lighter, more citified sense of humor.
Meanwhile, the chairman's statement that it will not rush into 'madcap ventures' is reassuring.
Prior to that, everyone always thought of me as this serious actor who plays psychotics and neurotics and sensitive people." Kevin Kline won his nomination as the madcap but vicious underworld type in "A Fish Called Wanda."
He gained national attention for his infrequently broadcast, two-minute "Looking for Rudy" ad that showed him in a madcap effort to engage Boschwitz in a debate.
Instead, it's a series of mostly witless vignettes about a brother and sister's madcap imaginary tour of Europe.
Two West Germans cruised the Mediterranean on hot yachts, financed a madcap business venture with stolen money and tangled up Tangier harbor before justice caught up with them, police said Friday.