The Lodger
As is traditional in almost all of his films, Alfred Hitchcock makes a brief cameo in the movie "The Man Who Knew Too Much" starring James Stewart and Doris Day. He can be seen 25 minutes, 42 seconds into the film, standing in the middle of a crowd watching performing acrobats in a Moroccan marketplace. The scene occurs right before the character of Louis Bernard is killed by an assassin.
A crowd is the collective noun for people watching a match. You cannot have a collective noun of watching a match because watching is a verb, not a noun.
The crowd is watching him as people watch monkeys at a zoo.
Spectators, crowd or audience.
A baseball game.
The word 'watching' is the present participle of the verb to watch (I am watching, they are watching). The present participle of the verb is also an adjective (the watching crowd), and a gerund, a verbal noun. Gerunds are uncountable nouns.
He dela like the crowd is watching him
The cast of Red Hicks Defies the World - 1913 includes: Gertrude Bambrick as In Crowd Lionel Barrymore as The Referee William Beaudine as In Ring Harry Carey as In Crowd Frank Evans as In Crowd Charles Gorman as In Crowd Charles Hill Mailes as In Crowd Harry Hyde as In Crowd Adolph Lestina as Second Creditor Joseph McDermott as In Crowd Walter Miller as In Crowd Charles Murray as Red Hicks Frank Opperman as In Crowd Alfred Paget as In Crowd Charles West as In Crowd
Rescue the individual being beaten and arrest the individuals assaulting them.
The collective noun is an audience of spectators.
The collective noun for people watching sports is a "crowd." A crowd refers to a large group of people gathered together in a particular place, such as a stadium or arena, to watch a sporting event. The term "crowd" is commonly used to describe the collective audience or spectators at a sports game or competition.
A "cameo" is a piece of jewelry in the form of a carved silhouette. In the theater, the phrase "cameo appearance" was used to refer to a brief appearance in a play or movie, frequently where the actor is not playing any role. For example, Alfred Hitchcock appeared "in cameo" in most of his movies; frequently walking by as an anonymous face in the crowd, or boarding a bus in the background of the scene.