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drama
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drama

Literary genre of scripted work. A theatrical drama is intended to be performed by actors for an audience. Verse and prose drama can both be performed (often in the same work), although dramas are also sometimes written to be read and not performed. The term is used collectively to group plays into historical or stylistic periods – for example, Greek drama, Restoration drama – as well as referring to the whole body of work written by a dramatist for performance.

Drama is distinct from literature in that it is a performing art open to infinite interpretation, the product not merely of the dramatist but also of the collaboration of director, designer, actors, and technical staff. See also theatre, comedy, tragedy, mime, and pantomime.

Drama

Town and department of northwest Greece, in the Macedonia region; population (2001) 42,500. It is a centre for the Greek tobacco trade, and has commercial, administrative, and strategic importance. There are also food-processing factories.

There are rail links with Thessaloniki and Istanbul. It is the seat of an Orthodox archbishop.



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With a Dodgers offense fading, and reduced to just five hits Thursday, they are in great need of Garciaparra's frequent dramatics.
He's spent a career conditioning the viewer to scan his images for eerie narrative disruptions, but here uses nuance and detail to arguably greater effect--evoking a sense of menace not through over dramatics but through a tiny cut on the girl's face and an orchid that leers at her from the edge of the frame; desire not through blatant lasciviousness but through a plate of glistening fruit at the woman's hip.
Its over-the-top dramatics, acrobatic dancing, and martial displays leave little room for three-dimensional nuance.
 
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