Arts and other vocabulary
Across
- 3. a person who writes music.
- 4. an elaborate instrumental composition in three or more movements, similar in form to a sonata but written for an orchestra and usually of far grander proportions and more varied elements.
- 5. a thin layer or coating
- 6. a composition in verse, especially one that is characterized by a highly developed artistic form and by the use of heightened language and rhythm to express an intensely imaginative interpretation of the subject.
- 8. to represent (a fictitious or historical character) with one's person
- 9. a person who dances professionally, as on the stage.
- 10. a classical dance form demanding grace and precision and employing formalized steps and gestures set in intricate, flowing patterns to create expression through movement.
- 13. a woman who acts in stage plays, motion pictures, television broadcasts, etc
- 15. a person who sings, especially a trained or professional vocalist.
- 17. the art of carving, modeling, welding, or otherwise producing figurative or abstract works of art in three dimensions, as in relief, intaglio, or in the round.
- 19. the act, art, or work of a person who paints.
Down
- 1. a fictitious prose narrative of considerable length and complexity, portraying characters and usually presenting a sequential organization of action and scenes.
- 2. any person, whether professional or not, skilled in music.
- 3. a public musical performance in which a number of singers or instrumentalists, or both, participate.
- 6. a writer of plays; dramatist.
- 7. to move one's feet or body, or both, rhythmically in a pattern of steps, especially to the accompaniment of music.
- 11. a person who does something
- 12. a sequence of consecutive still images recorded in a series to be viewed on a screen in such rapid succession as to give the illusion of natural movement
- 14. a three-dimensional work of art, as a representational or abstract form, carved in stone or wood, molded in a plastic material, cast in bronze, or the like.
- 16. an extended dramatic composition, in which all parts are sung to instrumental accompaniment, that usually includes arias, choruses, and recitatives, and that sometimes includes ballet.
- 18. to lead of a musical group, by communicating to the performers by motions of a baton or the hands his or her interpretation of the music.