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Audiences Quotes - related books on Amazon -> Audiences When I m talking to a large audience, I imagine that I m talking to a single person.
Audiences
Barber, Red
1908-1992 American Baseball Broadcaster

Every crowd has a silver lining.
Audiences
Barnum, P.T.
1810-1891 American Showman Entertainer Circus Builder

I never let them cough. They wouldn t dare.
Audiences
Barrymore, Ethel
1879-1959 American Actress

Your audience gives you everything you need. They tell you. There is no director who can direct you like an audience.
Audiences
Brice, Fanny
1891-1951 American Entertainer

Many audiences all over the world will answer positively from their own experience that they have seen the face of the invisible through an experience on the stage that transcended their experience in life. They will maintain that Oedipus or Berenice or Hamlet or The Three Sisters performed with beauty and with love fires the spirit and gives them a reminder that daily drabness is not necessarily all.
Audiences
Brook, Peter (Stephen Paul)
1925 British Theatre and Film Director

It was a good thing to have a couple of thousand people all rigid and frozen together, in the palm of one s hand.
Audiences
Dickens, Charles
1812-1870 British Novelist

Discourse on virtue and they pass by in droves, whistle and dance the shimmy, and you ve got an audience.
Audiences
Diogenes of Sinope
c410-320 BC Cynic Philosopher

It is because the public are a mass -- inert, obtuse, and passive -- that they need to be shaken up from time to time so that we can tell from their bear-like grunts where they are -- and also where they stand. They are pretty harmless, in spite of their numbers, because they are fighting against intelligence.
Audiences
Jarry, Alfred
1873-1907 French Playwright Author

It s easier to find a new audience than to write a new speech.
Audiences
Kennedy, Dan
American Businessman Marketing Expert

We respond to a drama to that extent to which it corresponds to our dream life.
Audiences
Mamet, David
1947 American Playwright

My conception of the audience is of a public each member of which is carrying about with him what he thinks is an anxiety, or a hope, or a preoccupation which is his alone and isolates him from mankind; and in this respect at least the function of a play is to reveal him to himself so that he may touch others by virtue of the revelation of his mutuality with them. If only for this reason I regard the theater as a serious business, one that makes or should make man more human, which is to say, less alone.
Audiences
Miller, Arthur
1915 American Dramatist

I never failed to convince an audience that the best thing they could do was to go away.
Audiences
Peacock, Thomas Love
1785-1866 British Author

I m not here for your amusement. You re here for mine.
Audiences
Rotten, John Lydon
1957 British Rock Musician

It s the admirer and the watcher who provoke us to all the inanities we commit.
Audiences
Seneca
4 BC – 65 AD Spanish-born Roman Statesman philosopher

The audience is the most revered member of the theater. Without an audience there is no theater. Every technique learned by the actor, every curtain, every flat on the stage, every careful analysis by the director, every coordinated scene, is for the enjoyment of the audience. They are our guests, our evaluators, and the last spoke in the wheel which can then begin to roll. They make the performance meaningful.
Audiences
Spolin, Viola
1911 American Theatrical Director Producer

Never treat your audience as customers, always as partners.
Audiences
Stewart, Jimmy

Some writers take to drink, others take to audiences.
Audiences
Vidal, Gore
1925 American Novelist Critic

To have great poets, there must be great audiences too.
Audiences
Whitman, Walt
1819-1892 American Poet

An audience is never wrong. An individual member of it may be an imbecile, but a thousand imbeciles together in the dark -- that is critical genius.
Audiences
Wilder, Billy
1906 American Film Director