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Word: pit (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

Sakas has done much better with the staging than he did with the program notes. He manages to use the cramped, limited quarters of Leverett's Old Library imaginatively; the audience sits in a kind of pit in the center of the room and the musicians stand above them in high window ledges. Elevated runways line the library's walls, and these serve not only as entrances and exits for the dancers and chorus, but also as extensions of the stage proper. When the singers line either of these runways and belt out "Golden Tears" or "Beauty and the Beast...

Author: By Sarah Paul, | Title: Bowie Worship | 4/23/1982 | See Source »

...whip up. Local citizens were dubious, and some are now peeved. But what was not long ago a desolate downtown patch of rail sidings and weeds is now a nearly complete 77-acre complex of gleaming pavilions, an aerial tramway, a fabric-covered amphitheater and a quarter-mile-long pit that will soon be World's Fair Lake. The fair's signature structure: the Sunsphere, a steel shaft housing two restaurants, which with its gilded-globe top looks like the world's only 266-ft. microphone. Says Fair President S.H. ("Bo") Roberts: "This is going...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Barn Burner in a Backwater | 4/12/1982 | See Source »

Talk with any member of the Pirates company, and what you are likely to hear is a succession of admiring stories about other members of the cast. Basic Pirates lore, told from different viewpoints, is an account of the night on Broadway when the pit band came in drunk from a Christmas party and couldn't toot together or on key. Ronstadt, making her first entrance, a point at which she must sing Poor Wandering One in a way that tells everyone who's boss, heard their clamor and got the giggles. She couldn't stop...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: Hail, Poetry | 3/22/1982 | See Source »

...leased to drillers. The work is deafening, unclean and, of course, extremely profitable. Oilworkers seem weirdly surly and uncommunicative for this part of the country, like punk rockers, Ahab's harpooners, aliens. The chemical "slush" from the hole in the ground gushes up into a loathesome open pit lined with a sort of Hefty...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In West Texas: The Great Mesquite Wars | 3/1/1982 | See Source »

...pit orchestra broke into a feisty rendition of "Yankee Doodle Dandy," and the audience, dressed in formal attire, set down their champagne glasses to clap in accompaniment. The colorful constant was raised, and James Cagney, learning lightly on a came, smiled and thanked the crowed for his routing welcome...

Author: By Donald N. Sull, | Title: Cagney Honored As Hasty Pudding Man of the Year | 2/25/1982 | See Source »

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