Word: rapport
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...familiarity of the audience with most of the songs they performed, Roxette maintained an intimate rapport with their fans throughout the show. When Fredriksson and Gessle left the stage without performing one of their most popular ballads, "Listen to Your Heart," the audience insistently reminded them of the song, chanting the title until Roxette returned to the stage and offered an encore as an apology...
With infectious enthusiasm, an engaging Southern accent and boyish charm, Clark effortlessly develops an amiable rapport with his audience as soon as he takes the stage. Clark sometimes even laughs at his own jokes, apologizing profusely and easily winning the forgiveness of the crowd...
...wears the pants in the relationship. Although her exchanges with Adam tend to be less convincing than the rest of her performance, she plays her part with excellent timing and gusto, and her facial expressions are even funnier than some of her lines. She also creates a rapport with the audience, full of wide eyes and exasperated glances. Her character is ballsy and funny, the glue that holds the story together...
...forgotten middle class." Of the items in his economic-recovery program, the one mentioned most often is a tax cut for middle-income Americans. For conservative Georgians, he unveiled a new promise: "insisting that those on welfare move into the workplace." His commercials make good use of Clinton's rapport with the camera. His media adviser, Frank Greer, manages to blend the candidate's persona and platform into a seamless series of spots...
...added that he has a better rapport with Anderson than the previous Cambridge chief, Anthony G. Paolillo...