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A peanut gallery was, in the days of vaudeville, a nickname for the cheapest and ostensibly rowdiest seats in the theater, the occupants of which were often known to heckle the performers. [1] The least expensive snack served at the theatre would often be peanuts , which the patrons would sometimes throw at the performers on stage to convey ...
The peanut gallery, circa 1949. A distinctive feature was the Peanut Gallery, onstage bleachers seating about 40 children. Each show began with Buffalo Bob asking, "Say kids, what time is it?" and the kids yelling in unison, "It's Howdy Doody Time!"
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The "Peanut Gallery", an audience usually composed almost entirely of pre-adolescent children who were coached by a staff member, continued their enthusiastic cheering and applause from the on-stage bleachers. After as much as ten seconds of writhing by the stricken Lee, the camera abruptly panned to the still-cheering audience.
Peanut lived on the couple’s 350-acre property, P’nut’s Freedom Farm, near Elmira, New York, which they purchased with the money they made from posting X-rated content online.
Peanuts Gallery is a piano concerto by the American composer Ellen Taaffe Zwilich, inspired by the characters of the comic strip Peanuts by Charles M. Schulz, who was a friend of Zwilich. It was commissioned for the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra by the Carnegie Hall Corporation, and first performed by the pianist Albert Kim and the Orpheus Chamber ...
Peanut, who boasts 535,000 followers on Instagram and 423,000 on Facebook, was seized by officers from the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, according to a statement made by ...
Professional opinion-havers (collectively known as the peanut gallery) are Wikipedia "editors" who primarily express opinions rather than improving main space content in any meaningful way. Such editors typically thrive in temperate to hostile environments, and extract nutrients from their surroundings by feeding off the shreds of editors who ...