- Comedian, The (film by Hackford [2016])
Edie Falco: Falco’s later film credits included The Comedian (2016), Landline (2017), and Megan Leavey (2017). In 2018 she appeared as the estranged wife of a man facing a midlife crisis in The Land of Steady Habits. She then starred in the TV series Tommy (2020), about the first female chief of…
- Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee (Web series)
Jerry Seinfeld: Later activities: …hosted the popular Web series Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee (2012– ), in which he talked with various comedians.
- Comedians, The (film by Glenville [1967])
Lillian Gish: …Hunter (1955), The Unforgiven (1960), The Comedians (1967), A Wedding (1978), Hambone and Hillie (1984), Sweet Liberty (1986), and her final film, The Whales of August (1987), with Bette Davis. She also appeared on television in a number of distinguished dramatic presentations, most notably in Arsenic and Old Lace with…
- Comedians, The (British television program)
stand-up comedy: The British tradition and the spread of stand-up comedy: …the popular British TV show The Comedians. Television, at the same time, provided an ideal platform for a far different kind of stand-up comic, Dave Allen. Allen, an urbane Irishman, hosted several popular talk-variety shows on British TV and would typically sit on a stool, cigarette in one hand and…
- Comedians, The (novel by Greene)
The Comedians, novel concerning the need for courage in the face of evil by Graham Greene, published in 1966. The story is set in Haiti in the mid-1960s, during the regime of the brutal dictator François Duvalier. It is narrated by Brown, a ne’er-do-well who has inherited a failing hotel near the
- Comedias bárbaras (work by Valle-Inclán)
Spanish literature: Novels and essays: The trilogy Comedias bárbaras (1907, 1908, 1923), set in an anachronistic, semifeudal Galicia and linked by a single protagonist, is in dialogue form, which gives these novels the feel of impossibly long cinematographic dramas. This series initiated Valle’s aesthetic movement away from Modernismo’s quest for beauty, which…
- comédie de vaudeville (theater)
opéra-comique: …18th century out of the comédies de vaudeville, farcical entertainments performed at fairs. Their characters derived from those of the improvised Italian commedia dell’arte, and they included popular songs, or vaudevilles, which were given new, often satiric words. In 1715 the various performing groups were combined in Paris as the…
- Comédie des Tuileries, La (French play)
Pierre Corneille: Early life and career.: …III) of the outline for La Comédie des Tuileries (1635). In the event, Corneille’s contribution was artistically outstanding.
- Comédie humaine, La (series of novels and novellas by Balzac)
The Human Comedy, a vast series of some 90 novels and novellas by Honoré de Balzac, known in the original French as La Comédie humaine. The books that made up the series were published between 1829 and 1847. Balzac’s plan to produce a unified series of books that would comprehend the whole of
- comédie larmoyante (French theater)
comédie larmoyante, 18th-century genre of French sentimental drama, which formed a bridge between the decaying tradition of aristocratic Neoclassical tragedy and the rise of serious bourgeois drama. Such comedies made no pretense of being amusing; virtuous characters were subjected to distressing
- Comedie van Israël (drama by Coornhert)
Dirck Volckertszoon Coornhert: …are allegorical and didactic: the Comedie van Israël (1575) attacks the worldly, hypocritical Netherlands of his time. He is now best known for his defense of tolerance and his criticism of prejudice.
- Comédie-Française (French national theater)
Comédie-Française, national theatre of France and the world’s longest established national theatre. After the death of the playwright Molière (1673), his company of actors joined forces with a company playing at the Théâtre du Marais, the resulting company being known as the Théâtre Guénégaud. In
- Comédie-Italienne (French theater)
Comédie-Italienne, the Italian commedia dell’arte as it was called in France. The name was used in France after 1680 to distinguish the commedia dell’arte from native French drama produced at the Comédie-Française. Italian commedia dell’arte companies appeared in France from the 16th century and
- Comédiens du Roi, Les (French theatrical company)
Théâtre de l’Hôtel de Bourgogne: …company in Paris, known as Les Comédiens du Roi (“the King’s Players”), established itself in the theatre about 1610. The Comédiens enjoyed considerable success and gradually assumed full-time use of the theatre. They were without an important rival until 1634, when a second theatre, the Théâtre du Marais, was built…
- Comédies facétieuses (plays by Larivey)
Pierre de Larivey: Larivey’s most successful Comédies facétieuses (1579, 1611) were free adaptations from Italian playwrights, with French settings and idioms added. These comedies of intrigue were popular for their sudden twists in plot, swift reversals of fortune, and realistic, racy language. Molière used situations from Larivey’s Les Esprits and Le…
- comedo (acne)
acne: …vulgaris is the comedo, or blackhead, which consists of a plug of sebum (the fatty substance secreted by a sebaceous gland), cell debris, and microorganisms (especially the bacterium Propionibacterium acnes) filling up a hair follicle. Comedones may be open, their upper or visible portion being darkened by oxidative changes, or…
- comedones (acne)
acne: …vulgaris is the comedo, or blackhead, which consists of a plug of sebum (the fatty substance secreted by a sebaceous gland), cell debris, and microorganisms (especially the bacterium Propionibacterium acnes) filling up a hair follicle. Comedones may be open, their upper or visible portion being darkened by oxidative changes, or…
- Comedown Machine (album by the Strokes)
the Strokes: …followed with Angles (2011) and Comedown Machine (2013). Awash in layers of electronic sounds, the albums moved the band farther away from the stripped-down rock by which it had made its name, and they were met with largely mixed reviews. In 2014 Casablancas formed a new band, the Voidz, which…
- comedy (literature and performance)
comedy, type of drama or other art form the chief object of which, according to modern notions, is to amuse. It is contrasted on the one hand with tragedy and on the other with farce, burlesque, and other forms of humorous amusement. The classic conception of comedy, which began with Aristotle in
- Comedy Central (American cable channel)
HBO: …competing channel HA! to become Comedy Central, the home of The Daily Show with Jon Stewart (1999–2015), South Park (1997– ), and Chappelle’s Show (2003–06). HBO’s The Larry Sanders Show (1992–98), starring comedian Garry Shandling, did to late-night talk shows what Tanner ’88 had done to political campaigns, to great…
- Comedy in Music (show by Borge)
Victor Borge: …as did his one-man show, Comedy in Music, which ran for 849 performances in 1953–56 and set a Broadway record for a solo show. Borge’s trademark bits included his “phonetic punctuation,” in which he read a story but used a sound for each punctuation mark, and his “inflated language,” in…
- Comedy of Errors, The (work by Shakespeare)
The Comedy of Errors, five-act comedy by William Shakespeare, written in 1589–94 and first published in the First Folio of 1623 from Shakespeare’s manuscript. It was based on Menaechmi by Plautus, with additional material from Plautus’s Amphitruo and the story of Apollonius of Tyre. The play’s
- Comedy of Illusion, The (work by Corneille)
French literature: The development of drama: …his L’Illusion comique (performed 1636; The Comedy of Illusion), a brilliant exploitation of the interplay between reality and illusion that characterizes Baroque art. The two trends come together in Corneille’s theatre in Le Cid (performed 1637; The Cid), which, though often called the first Classical tragedy, was created as a…
- Comedy of Power, The (film by Chabrol [2006])
Isabelle Huppert: Versatility in the 1990s and 2000s: …and L’Ivresse du pouvoir (2006; The Comedy of Power), in which she starred as a judge who heads an investigation into corporate corruption. In 2008 Huppert appeared as a plantation owner in French Indochina in Un Barrage contre le Pacifique (2008; The Sea Wall), an adaptation of Marguerite Duras’s novel…
- comedy of situation (narrative genre)
comedy of intrigue, in dramatic literature, a comic form in which complicated conspiracies and stratagems dominate the plot. The complex plots and subplots of such comedies are often based on ridiculous and contrived situations with large doses of farcical humour. An example of comedy of intrigue
- comedy-variety show (type of programming)
Television in the United States: Getting started: …Star Theatre (NBC, 1948–53), a comedy-variety show that quickly became the most popular program at that point in television’s very short history. When the series debuted, fewer than 2 percent of American households had a television set; when Berle left the air in 1956 (after starring in his subsequent NBC…
- Comedy: American Style (novel by Fauset)
Jessie Redmon Fauset: In Fauset’s best-known novel, Comedy: American Style (1933), Olivia Carey, the protagonist, is a black woman who longs to be white, while her son and husband take pride in their cultural heritage. Fauset’s other novels include There Is Confusion (1924), Plum Bun (1928), and The Chinaberry Tree (1931).
- Comendador (Dominican Republic)
Comendador, city, western Dominican Republic, in the San Juan valley near the border with Haiti. It serves as a commercial centre for the surrounding agricultural lands, which produce sugarcane, cotton, coffee, and fruit. Comendador is the terminus of the paved highway from Santo Domingo, the
- Comenius University (university, Bratislava, Slovakia)
Slovakia: Education: …the largest and oldest is Comenius University in Bratislava (founded 1919). Also in Bratislava are the Slovak University of Technology, the University of Economics, and several arts academies. Košice also has universities and a school of veterinary medicine. Since independence, additional colleges and universities have opened in Trnava, Banská Bystrica,…
- Comenius, John Amos (Czech educator)
John Amos Comenius was a Czech educational reformer and religious leader, remembered mainly for his innovations in methods of teaching, especially languages. He favoured the learning of Latin to facilitate the study of European culture. Janua Linguarum Reserata (1632; The Gate of Tongues Unlocked)
- comentarios reales de los Incas, Los (work by Garcilaso)
Latin American literature: Historians of the New World: …de los Incas (1609, 1617; Royal Commentaries of the Incas, with a foreword by Arnold J. Toynbee), whose second part is called Historia general del Perú (General History of Peru).
- Comephoridae (fish)
scorpaeniform: Annotated classification: Family Comephoridae (Baikal oilfishes) Size to about 20 cm (8 inches). Freshwater, endemic to Lake Baikal in Russia. 1 genus (Comephorus) with 2 species. Family Psychrolutidae (fathead sculpins) Body naked, with loose skin, or with plates bearing prickles; lateral line reduced; pelvic fin with one spine and…
- Comer, James (American child psychiatrist)
James Comer is an American child psychiatrist and founder of the Comer School Development Program, a school reform process meant to improve students’ psychological and academic development, especially in underprivileged communities. Comer was born into a working-class family. He earned a bachelor’s
- Comer, James Pierpont (American child psychiatrist)
James Comer is an American child psychiatrist and founder of the Comer School Development Program, a school reform process meant to improve students’ psychological and academic development, especially in underprivileged communities. Comer was born into a working-class family. He earned a bachelor’s
- Comer, Jodie (British actress)
Jodie Comer is an English actress best known for playing the psychopathic assassin Villanelle on the award-winning BBC America spy thriller Killing Eve (2018–22). Comer is the eldest of two children born to Donna Comer, a Merseyrail employee, and James Comer, a physiotherapist for Everton Football
- Comeragh Mountains (mountains, Ireland)
Comeragh Mountains, mountain range in County Waterford, Ireland, extending from the River Suir valley near Clonmel to the coastal lowland north of Stradbally. Their directional trend is northwest-southeast, and their peaks rise to elevations above 2,000 feet (600 m), with the highest point being
- Comercio, El (Peruvian newspaper)
El Comercio, Peruvian newspaper published in Lima. The newspaper is one of the most respected in South America and is dedicated to “order, liberty, knowledge.” Founded in 1839 and long owned by the Miró Quesada family, El Comercio is the oldest newspaper in Peru and the second oldest on the
- Comercio, El (Ecuadoran newspaper)
Ecuador: Media and publishing: El Comercio (“Commerce”), published in Quito, is perhaps the country’s most prestigious newspaper; it provides detailed, serious coverage of political, economic, environmental, and cultural news, together with commentary by a number of well-known columnists. Hoy (“Today”), also published in Quito, uses a more modern format.…
- Comércio, Praça do (square, Lisbon, Portugal)
Lisbon: City layout: …water to the vast arcaded Commerce Square (Praça do Comércio). The three landward sides of the square are surrounded by uniform buildings dating from the 18th century. That formal Baroque-inspired layout is pierced by a monumental archway, built a century later, marking the entry north into the central city. In…
- Comes a Horseman (film by Pakula [1978])
Alan J. Pakula: Films of the 1970s: …critical and financial success, Pakula’s Comes a Horseman (1978) was viewed by some as a major disappointment. It was a slow, if beautifully photographed, psychological western set in post-World War II Montana. Robards starred as a crusty rancher bent on expanding his spread, and Fonda portrayed his neighbour, who is…
- comes Africae (Roman military official)
North Africa: Later Roman Empire: …under a new commander, the comes Africae, independent of the provincial governors. Only the governors of Tripolitania and of Mauretania Caesariensis also had troops at their disposal, but these were second-line soldiers, or limitanei. The whole frontier region along the desert and mountain fringes was divided into sectors and garrisoned…
- comes stabuli (ancient official)
constable: The title comes stabuli is found in the Roman and particularly in the Eastern Roman, or Byzantine, Empire from the 5th century ad as that of the head of the stables at the imperial court. The Franks borrowed the title, and under the Merovingian and Carolingian kings…
- COMESA (African organization)
Africa: Internal trade: …Sierra Leone, and Togo; the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA), consisting of Burundi, Comoros, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Djibouti, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Libya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius, Rwanda, Seychelles, Sudan, Swaziland, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe; the East African Community, comprising Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, and…
- Comet (airplane)
aerospace engineering: Aeronautical engineering: …1949 the British de Havilland Comet inaugurated commercial jet transport flight. The Comet, however, experienced structural failures that curtailed the service, and it was not until 1958 that the highly successful Boeing 707 jet transport began nonstop transatlantic flights. While civil aircraft designs utilize most new technological advancements, the transport…
- Comet (steamship)
Henry Bell: Bell’s own steamship, the 28-ton Comet, was launched from Port Glasgow in 1812 and subsequently carried passengers and cargo along the Clyde River. The success of this vessel heralded the era of steam navigation in Europe.
- comet (astronomy)
comet, a small body orbiting the Sun with a substantial fraction of its composition made up of volatile ices. When a comet comes close to the Sun, the ices sublimate (go directly from the solid to the gas phase) and form, along with entrained dust particles, a bright outflowing atmosphere around
- Comet 81P (comet)
comet: Spacecraft exploration of comets: …dust from the coma of Comet 81P/Wild 2. At a flyby speed of 6.1 km per second (13,600 miles per hour), the dust samples would be completely destroyed by impact with a hard collector. Therefore, Stardust used a material made of silica (sand) called aerogel that had a very low…
- Comet 81P/Wild 2 (comet)
comet: Spacecraft exploration of comets: …dust from the coma of Comet 81P/Wild 2. At a flyby speed of 6.1 km per second (13,600 miles per hour), the dust samples would be completely destroyed by impact with a hard collector. Therefore, Stardust used a material made of silica (sand) called aerogel that had a very low…
- Comet 9P/Tempel 1 (comet)
comet: Spacecraft exploration of comets: …spacecraft that would fly by Comet 9P/Tempel 1 and a daughter spacecraft that would be deliberately crashed into the comet nucleus. The mother spacecraft would take images of the impact. The daughter spacecraft contained its own camera system to image the nucleus surface up to the moment of impact. To…
- Comet Arend-Roland (astronomy)
Comet Arend-Roland, long-period comet remarkable for its anomalous second tail, which projected toward rather than away from the Sun. It was one of the brightest naked-eye comets of the 20th century. It was discovered photographically on the night of November 8–9, 1956, by Sylvain Arend and Georges
- Comet Biela (astronomy)
Biela’s Comet, short-period comet named for the Austrian astronomer Wilhelm, Freiherr (baron) von Biela (1782–1856). It was originally discovered by French amateur astronomer Jacques Leibax Montaigne in 1772. It was rediscovered by French astronomer Jean-Louis Pons in 1805 and was identified as the
- Comet Chiron (astronomy)
Chiron, icy small body orbiting the Sun in the outer solar system among the giant planets. Once thought to be the most distant known asteroid, Chiron is now believed to have the composition of a comet nucleus—i.e., a mixture of water ice, other frozen gases, organic material, and silicate dust.
- Comet Encke (astronomy)
Encke’s Comet, faint comet having the shortest orbital period (about 3.3 years) of any known; it was also only the second comet (after Halley’s) to have its period established. The comet was first observed in 1786 by French astronomer Pierre Méchain. In 1819 German astronomer Johann Franz Encke
- Comet Hale-Bopp (astronomy)
Comet Hale-Bopp, long-period comet that was spectacularly visible to the naked eye, having a bright coma, a thick white dust tail, and a bright blue ion tail. It was discovered independently on July 23, 1995, by Alan Hale and Thomas Bopp, two American amateur astronomers, at the unusually far
- Comet Halley (astronomy)
Halley’s Comet, the first comet whose return was predicted and, almost three centuries later, the first to be imaged up close by interplanetary spacecraft. In 1705 English astronomer Edmond Halley published the first catalog of the orbits of 24 comets. His calculations showed that comets observed
- Comet Hyakutake (astronomy)
Comet Hyakutake, long-period comet that, because of its relatively close passage to Earth, was observed as one the brightest comets of the 20th century. It was discovered on January 30, 1996, by the Japanese amateur astronomer Hyakutake Yuji, using large binoculars. Visible to the naked eye in late
- Comet Ikeya-Seki (astronomy)
Comet Ikeya-Seki, long-period comet that is one of a group of sungrazing comets, known as the Kreutz group, having very similar orbits and including the Great Comet of 1882. Comet Ikeya-Seki was discovered on September 18, 1965, by two Japanese amateur astronomers, Ikeya Kaoru and Seki Tsutomu.
- Comet Ikeya-Seki 1965 VIII (astronomy)
Comet Ikeya-Seki, long-period comet that is one of a group of sungrazing comets, known as the Kreutz group, having very similar orbits and including the Great Comet of 1882. Comet Ikeya-Seki was discovered on September 18, 1965, by two Japanese amateur astronomers, Ikeya Kaoru and Seki Tsutomu.
- Comet Morehouse (astronomy)
Comet Morehouse, very bright comet in a retrograde near-parabolic orbit, remarkable for variations in the form and structure of its ion, or plasma, tail. It was named after American astronomer Daniel Walter Morehouse and was observed from September 1908 to May 1909. On several occasions the ion
- Comet P/Encke (astronomy)
Encke’s Comet, faint comet having the shortest orbital period (about 3.3 years) of any known; it was also only the second comet (after Halley’s) to have its period established. The comet was first observed in 1786 by French astronomer Pierre Méchain. In 1819 German astronomer Johann Franz Encke
- Comet P/Halley (astronomy)
Halley’s Comet, the first comet whose return was predicted and, almost three centuries later, the first to be imaged up close by interplanetary spacecraft. In 1705 English astronomer Edmond Halley published the first catalog of the orbits of 24 comets. His calculations showed that comets observed
- Comet P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 1 (astronomy)
Comet Schwassmann-Wachmann 1, short-period comet discovered photographically by the German astronomers Friedrich Karl Arnold Schwassmann and Arno Arthur Wachmann on November 15, 1927. It has one of the most circular orbits of any comet known (eccentricity = 0.044) and remains always between the
- Comet Schwassmann-Wachmann 1 (astronomy)
Comet Schwassmann-Wachmann 1, short-period comet discovered photographically by the German astronomers Friedrich Karl Arnold Schwassmann and Arno Arthur Wachmann on November 15, 1927. It has one of the most circular orbits of any comet known (eccentricity = 0.044) and remains always between the
- Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 (astronomy)
Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9, comet whose disrupted nucleus crashed into Jupiter over the period of July 16–22, 1994. The cataclysmic event, the first collision between two solar system bodies ever predicted and observed, was monitored from Earth-based telescopes worldwide, the Hubble Space Telescope and
- comet tail (astronomy)
comet: Tails: In 1951 German astronomer Ludwig Biermann studied the tails of comets and showed that the ion tails flowed away from the Sun at speeds in excess of 400 km (250 miles) per second. He suggested that the phenomenon had to be associated with some…
- Comet Tempel 1 (comet)
comet: Spacecraft exploration of comets: …spacecraft that would fly by Comet 9P/Tempel 1 and a daughter spacecraft that would be deliberately crashed into the comet nucleus. The mother spacecraft would take images of the impact. The daughter spacecraft contained its own camera system to image the nucleus surface up to the moment of impact. To…
- Comet Tempel-Tuttle (astronomy)
meteor shower: …period of its associated comet, Tempel-Tuttle), and occasional records of its appearances have been traced back to about ad 902. Since about 1945, radar observations have revealed meteor showers regularly occurring in the daylight sky, where they are invisible to the eye.
- cometary nucleus (comet)
comet: Cometary nuclei: Telescopic observations from Earth and spacecraft missions to comets have revealed much about their nuclei. Cometary nuclei are small solid bodies, typically only a few kilometres in diameter and composed of roughly equal parts of volatile ices, fine silicate dust, and
- cometary outburst (astronomy)
comet: Cometary nuclei: …may be one source of cometary outbursts—sharp increases in cometary activity that appear to occur randomly. It can likely explain the unusual brightness of dynamically new comets as they approach the Sun for the first time. New comets likely experience the amorphous-to-crystalline ice phase transition at between 5 and 7…
- Comey Rule, The (American television miniseries)
James Comey: Memoir and later activities: …the basis for the miniseries The Comey Rule (2020), with Jeff Daniels in the lead role. Comey later wrote Saving Justice: Truth, Transparency, and Trust (2021).
- Comey, James (American attorney and law enforcement official)
James Comey is a U.S. attorney and law enforcement official who served as director (2013–17) of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). Comey came from an Irish American family. His paternal grandfather was a police officer, and his father worked in commercial real estate. Comey grew up in
- Comey, James Brien (American attorney and law enforcement official)
James Comey is a U.S. attorney and law enforcement official who served as director (2013–17) of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). Comey came from an Irish American family. His paternal grandfather was a police officer, and his father worked in commercial real estate. Comey grew up in
- comfort index, Terjung’s (climatology)
climate classification: Empirical classifications: Terjung’s 1966 scheme was an attempt to group climates on the basis of their effects on human comfort. The classification makes use of four physiologically relevant parameters: temperature, relative humidity, wind speed, and solar radiation. The first two are combined in a comfort index to…
- Comfort of Strangers, The (novel by McEwan)
Ian McEwan: The Comfort of Strangers (1981; film 1990) is a nightmarish novel about an English couple in Venice.
- comfort women (Asian history)
comfort women, a euphemism for women who provided sexual services to Japanese Imperial Army troops during Japan’s militaristic period that ended with World War II and who generally lived under conditions of sexual slavery. Estimates of the number of women involved typically range up to 200,000, but
- Comfort, Alex (British author)
Alex Comfort was an English gerontologist and author, best known for his books on sexual behaviour. Comfort was educated at the University of Cambridge (B.A., 1943; M.A., 1945) and the University of London (Ph.D., 1949) and qualified in medicine at the Royal College of Physicians and London
- Comfort, Alexander (British author)
Alex Comfort was an English gerontologist and author, best known for his books on sexual behaviour. Comfort was educated at the University of Cambridge (B.A., 1943; M.A., 1945) and the University of London (Ph.D., 1949) and qualified in medicine at the Royal College of Physicians and London
- Comforters, The (work by Spark)
Muriel Spark: With the publication of The Comforters (1957), however, her talent as a novelist—an ability to create disturbing, compelling characters and a disquieting sense of moral ambiguity—was immediately evident. Her third novel, Memento Mori (1959), was adapted for the stage in 1964 and for television in 1992. Her best-known novel…
- comfortroot (plant)
Zamia: …of certain species, among them coontie, or comfortroot (Zamia integrifolia), found in the southeastern United States and the West Indies. Several species, notably the cardboard palm (Z. furfuracea), are cultivated as ornamentals. Many Zamia species are listed in the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species as endangered or critically endangered.
- Comforts of Home, The (story by O’Connor)
Everything That Rises Must Converge: Similarly, “The Comforts of Home” is about a self-styled intellectual who lives with his mother. Driven by the voice of his dead father, the son accidentally kills his sentimental mother instead of the petty criminal and self-confessed nymphomaniac the mother has taken in.
- comfrey (plant)
comfrey, any herb plant of the Eurasian genus Symphytum, of the family Boraginaceae, especially the medicinal common comfrey (S. officinale), used to treat wounds and a source of a gum for treatment of wool. The coiled sprays of comfrey blooms, which are bell-like, deeply parted, five-lobed, and
- Comhaontás Glas (political party, Ireland)
Green Party, political party founded in 1981 to promote an environmental agenda in the Republic of Ireland. The Ecology Party of Ireland, the forerunner of the current Green Party, was formed in December 1981 in Dublin with about 40 members. A convention in March 1982 established the party’s basic
- comic book
comic book, bound collection of comic strips, usually in chronological sequence, typically telling a single story or a series of different stories. The first true comic books were marketed in 1933 as giveaway advertising premiums. By 1935 reprints of newspaper strips and books with original stories
- comic opera
comic opera, general designation for musical plays with light subject matter and happy endings. The dialogue is usually spoken, rather than sung. In addition to operetta and musical comedy, types of comic opera include Italian opera buffa (which has sung dialogue), German Singspiel, English ballad
- Comic Potential (play by Ayckbourn)
Alan Ayckbourn: Friends (1991), Communicating Doors (1995), Comic Potential (1999), The Boy Who Fell into a Book (2000), and the trilogy Damsels in Distress (2002). In 2002 he published a work of advice and instruction for aspiring playwrights and directors, The Crafty Art of Playmaking.
- Comic Relief (charitable organization)
Billy Crystal: …year he also cohosted the Comic Relief comedy fund-raiser with Robin Williams and Whoopi Goldberg. The trio would go on to host some 10 televised Comic Relief events over two decades.
- comic relief
dramatic literature: Common elements of drama: …exquisite balance of pathos with comedy in order to ensure the affective function of their plays.
- comic song (music)
novelty song: …as novelties have usually been comic songs, in a tradition that goes back to British music hall hits such as “Laughing Policeman.” Comic records, such as Bill Buchanan and Dickie Goodman’s “The Flying Saucer” (1956) and Sheb Wooley’s “Purple People Eater” (1958), sold particularly well in the 1950s. Comedians such…
- comic strip
comic strip, series of adjacent drawn images, usually arranged horizontally, that are designed to be read as a narrative or a chronological sequence. The story is usually original in this form. Words may be introduced within or near each image, or they may be dispensed with altogether. If words
- Comic Strip Presents, The (television show)
Rik Mayall: Career and personal life: …the satiric television movie series The Comic Strip Presents (1982–2016), with episodes featuring players from The Comic Strip performing in 30-minute short films that parodied tales from other films, literature, and popular culture.
- comic verse (Italian literature)
Italian literature: Comic verse: Poesia giocoso (realistic, or comic, verse) was a complete contrast to serious love poetry. The language was often deliberately unrefined, colloquial, and sometimes scurrilous, in keeping with the themes dealt with in the poetry. This kind of verse belongs to an ongoing European…
- Comic, The (film by Reiner [1969])
Carl Reiner: Film directing: …worked with Van Dyke on The Comic (1969), an intermittently successful homage to the silent-screen comics. Better was Where’s Poppa? (1970), a daring black comedy starring George Segal as a frustrated lawyer and Ruth Gordon as his senile mom. Reiner then returned to television for several years, cocreating and producing…
- Comical Revenge; or, Love in a Tub, The (play by Etherege)
Sir George Etherege: Etherege’s first comedy, The Comical Revenge; or, Love in a Tub, was premiered at Lincoln’s Inn Fields Theatre in 1664. An immediate success, it was novel in its exploitation of contemporary manners, especially in the intrigue of the stylish Sir Frederick Frollick. It still followed earlier tradition, with…
- Comici Confidènti (Italian theatrical company)
Comici Confidènti, either of two companies of the Italian commedia dell’arte that were instrumental in extending the reputation of this form of improvised theatre throughout Europe. The first company, which performed in France and Spain as well as in Italy, was formed about 1574 under the
- Comics Code Authority (American literary code [1954])
supervillain: Postwar villains: …industry a censorship board (the Comics Code Authority, or CCA). The few postcode supervillains that still appeared in print were nonthreatening—and boring.
- Comilla (Bangladesh)
Comilla, city, eastern Bangladesh. It is situated just south of the Gumti River, which is a tributary of the Meghna River. Connected by road and rail with Dhaka and Chittagong, Comilla has been a centre for the collection of hides and skins; it also has jute and cotton mills as well as a thermal
- Comilla Victoria Government College (college, Comilla, Bangladesh)
Comilla: …most notable of which is Comilla Victoria University College (1899).
- Comilla Victoria University College (college, Comilla, Bangladesh)
Comilla: …most notable of which is Comilla Victoria University College (1899).
- Comin’ and Goin’ (album by Pepper)
Jim Pepper: On Comin’ and Goin’ (1983) Pepper revisited and reworked material from Pepper’s Pow Wow with various collaborators, including jazz trumpeter Don Cherry and multi-instrumentalist and world music artist Collin Walcott. On his final two albums, Dakota Song (1987) and The Path (1988), Pepper juxtaposed his interpretations…
- Comines, Philippe de (French statesman)
Philippe de Commynes was a statesman and chronicler whose Mémoires establish him as one of the greatest historians of the Middle Ages. Commynes was the son of a knight of the Order of the Golden Fleece and was the godson of Philip the Good, duke of Burgundy. He was brought up at the Burgundian