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 operatic [`ɑpə'rætɪk]   添加此单词到默认生词本
a. 歌剧的, 歌剧风格的



    operatic
    [ adj ]
    of or relating to or characteristic of opera
    <adj.pert>


    Operatic \Op`er*at"ic\, Operatical \Op`er*at"ic*al\, a.
    Of or pertaining to the opera or to operas; characteristic
    of, suitable for, or resembling, the opera; as, an operatic
    voice.
    [1913 Webster +PJC]

    1. Butler's original idea was to make something operatic out of 'American comic-book narrative and design of the 1930s to '50s', and especially a disoriented Superman-figure (Craig) from now.
    2. Sergey Leiferkus, an outstanding artist on the concert platform no less than on the operatic stage, seems in peak form just now.
    3. It has new headquarters in Birmingham and new productions to counter the charge that it is trying to revive an operatic corpse.
    4. With Henze's English Cat and Manfred Trojahn's Enrico among its recent successes, the Schwetzingen Festival - based at the baroque court theatre a few miles south of Mannheim - has proved fertile ground for operatic premieres.
    5. "Phantom" is not only set in an opera house, its form is decidedly operatic.
    6. It was the most ambitious and most time-consuming act of operatic collaboration between Richard Strauss and Hugo von Hofmannsthal.
    7. The program includes operatic arias and lieder.
    8. Elsewhere, the chorus excelled itself with controlled, still singing. All three soloists supplied the almost operatic dimension the composer sought.
    9. Michael Crawford, Brightman's co-star, received a Tony nomination as did Judy Kaye, who plays the actress' operatic rival in "Phantom."
    10. His popularity extended beyond the usual operatic circles and he became a familiar face on television.
    11. "The Ring" is a German myth about power struggles among ancient gods over a hoard of gold, and discord over how to present the work is nothing new in the operatic world.
    12. THE NEW regime at the Salzburg Festival, which took over at the start of the decade, initiated changes affecting the style, presentation and - most important - content of the operatic and musical offerings that are as yet by no means absorbed all through.
    13. Unfortunately, Ms. Larsen's grasp of traditional operatic principles is less sure.
    14. Ambroise Thomas's Hamlet (1874), one of the finest products of the 19th-century operatic second rank, has a star role for a lyric baritone of romantic presence, vocal magnetism and complete command of the French singing style.
    15. The voices all were good but never "too operatic." Sally Ann Howes, the second Eliza in "My Fair Lady" on Broadway, played the actress Desiree who gets to sing the show's best-known song, "Send in the Clowns."
    16. Sitting in for Galway in what would have been his operatic debut was his wife, Jeanne.
    17. In terms of quantity, at least, the city is currently the world's most varied operatic emporium.
    18. Pountney's great gifts as a producer have never extended to eliciting humane detail from his operatic actors. When Falstaff is thus reduced to featherweight farce, the subtle insights of Verdi's masterly score cannot register.
    19. AFTER nearly quarter of a century at the centre of Munich's operatic life, Wolfgang Sawallisch is leaving - and the city has suddenly begun to suffer withdrawal symptoms.
    20. Some of the plot problems reflect the genesis of the piece as a vehicle for Ezio Pinza, the operatic bass, and Mary Martin.
    21. When Richard Wagner put him on the operatic stage in 1845, Tannhauser was a noble knight with one girlfriend too many _ the pagan goddess of love.
    22. Sets and costumes also came from the Rome house. In the cast of the inaugural performance of Don Pasquale were the tenor Cesare Valletti and the baritone Rolando Panerai, neither of whom had yet appeared on the operatic stage.
    23. The work has much in common with Janacek's pliant operatic writing, yet only John Mitchinson, the veteran tenor, found the required energy for its impassioned Gloria and Credo.
    24. McNally has made the play less violent but also more believable. He has sacrificed a grand, almost operatic gesture for what is a more likely and much sadder conclusion.
    25. It failed to work because the pace of operatic reflection is so much slower than that of Woolf's prose, and because, without the narrative voice to rush and connect and poeticise, what these people have to say is trivial.
    26. Eurodisc is the vocal, choral and operatic label.
    27. The only previous operatic recording for HDTV, a new technology offering much closer detail and greater depth of field than standard television, was of the four-part Ring by a company this year in Munich, West Germany.
    28. But this was a serious undertaking on all counts, and the final scene of "Holy Blood" demonstrates a dramatic and musical sense that might well make Mr. Copeland a valuable addition to the operatic world, should he choose to pursue this new bent.
    29. His seven production designs for "Der Ring des Niebelungen" were the most by anyone since Richard Wagner compleeed the four-part operatic extravaganza in 1874.
    30. Milan knows all about operatic coincidence.
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