- A jester, also
known as joker,
court jester, or fool, was a
member of the
household of a
nobleman or a
monarch emplo**** to
entertain guests during royal...
- The
Flowers of
Buffoonery (道化の華, Dōke no Hana) is a 1935 ****anese
novella by
Osamu Dazai.
Initially titled The Sea (海, Umi) in an
early draft Dazai shared...
- Ōba
describes humans as if he is
separated from them. Ōba
resorts to
buffoonery in his
early years to
establish interpersonal relationships. He defines...
- folkway-norms. The art of
performing as a
clown is
known as
clowning or
buffoonery, and the term "clown" may be used
synonymously with
predecessors like...
- but I
still think there is a lot of
stuff out
today that is 'coonery
buffoonery'" and
highlighted the work and
content of John
Singleton as well as his...
-
television series Not Only... But Also. As a po****r
double act, Moore's
buffoonery contrasted with Cook's
deadpan monologues. They
jointly received the 1966...
-
through boasting,
boisterous jokes, drunkenness, scolding, fighting,
buffoonery and
other riotous activity. It is
characterized by "horseplay", slapstick...
- Self-control
Intemperance Sarcasm Sincerity Boastfulness Boorishness Wit
Buffoonery Shamelessness Modesty Shyness Callousness Just
resentment Spitefulness...
- silk
Aerial straps Artistic cycling Balancing Banquine Baton twirling Buffoonery Bullwhip Bungee trapeze Cannonball catching Carnival barking Chair balancing...
- actors) have been
directed to broad,
undisciplined performances [...]
Buffoonery hardly seems like Weisz's
natural domain, as the
actress strains for comic...