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Music hall   /mjˈuzɪk hɔl/   Listen
Music hall

noun
1.
A theater in which vaudeville is staged.  Synonyms: vaudeville theater, vaudeville theatre.
2.
A variety show with songs and comic acts etc..  Synonym: vaudeville.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Music hall" Quotes from Famous Books



... sixteen when her father left Montreal, and the family had not been long in Boston before she became engaged as a teacher at one of the conservatories, and a mutual attachment sprang up between the pair. Miss Sinclair had already made her debut in Boston Music Hall as a vocalist, and the pair were frequently engaged at the same concerts and entertainments, so that the natural sequence was that they in ...
— The Mysteries of Montreal - Being Recollections of a Female Physician • Charlotte Fuhrer

... me, as I made my way eastward, were mostly in evening dress, pale and raffish-looking. Many, particularly among the couples in hansoms, were intoxicated, and making a painful muddle of such melodies as those we had listened to at the music hall. Overeaten, overdrunken, overexcited, overextravagant, in all ways figures of incontinence, these noisy Londoners made their way homeward, pursued by the advancing gray light of a Sabbath dawn ...
— The Message • Alec John Dawson

... one evening, as three or four of us were coming out of a music hall, Barber offered some freedom to a lady which the gentleman with her—a member of Parliament, I was told—thought fit to resent. He turned fiercely on Barber with his hand raised—and then suddenly grew troubled, stepped ...
— The Best Short Stories of 1921 and the Yearbook of the American Short Story • Various

... who had just screwed his physical courage up to defy the redoubtable Unions had a fit of moral cowardice, and was so reluctant to encounter the gentlest woman in England, that he dined at a chop-house, and then sauntered into a music hall, and did not get home till past ten, meaning to say a few kind, hurried words, then yawn, and slip ...
— Put Yourself in His Place • Charles Reade

... actually was precipitated, when the South had fired upon the stars and stripes and the tread of marching feet resounded through every northern city, they were amazed and bewildered. Instinctively they turned to their great leaders for guidance. In Music Hall, Boston, April 21, 1861, to an audience of over 4,000, Wendell Phillips made that masterly address, justifying "this last appeal to the God of Battles," and declaring for War. It was one of the matchless speeches of all history, and touched the keynote which soon swelled into a grand refrain ...
— The Life and Work of Susan B. Anthony (Volume 1 of 2) • Ida Husted Harper


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