"They have their entrances and their exits". When actors come onto the stage so the audience can see them, it is called an entrance; when they leave the stage it is an exit. (We use the same words to describe a way in and a way out as well). Jaques is comparing the life of a person to a performance by an actor ("All the men and women merely players"), and as an actor has an entrance onto the stage, so people have an entrance into their lives: they are born. Just as an actor has an exit, so do people: they die.
Just imagine the stage as if it was tipping forward. Upstage is at the back of the stage, and downstage is at the front of the stage.
appearing on stage
Stage Presence means the ablility to command an audience with impressive style or manner . . .
Up Stage Right
The verb is roared.
Roar is the present tense of roared.
The duration of The Mouse That Roared is 1.38 hours.
The Mouse That Roared was created on 1959-10-26.
"Roared" has one syllable.
The monster roared loudly because it wants to be heard
Rodeo please let me know!!
That depends on what you mean. If you mean use it in your program, then just drag it rom the sprite library onto the stage. (The little screen that shows your program)
to rush up to the stage, crowd around the front of it, usually in enthusiastic response to the performers, often with the intent of touching them or shaking their hand; sometimes it includes getting up onto the stage itself, but this is discouraged by most security personnel
yes
The Mouse That Roared - 1966 TV was released on: USA: 1966
1994