From starring in a Broadway musical to playing an instrument in a world-renowned orchestra or directing a cutting-edge play; there are many glamorous performing arts jobs. Professional opportunities in the performing arts; however; go far beyond what is seen onstage. Behind every great performance is a group of hard workers who manage everything from props and equipment to ticket sales to contracts and legal requirements; making it possible for almost anyone interested in performing arts to have a rewarding career regardless of their onstage talent potential.
#1642065 in eBooks 2013-08-15 2013-08-15File Name: B00ECWBKJM
Review
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Its a pretty good play but dont bother with this editionBy mertylIts a pretty good play but dont bother with this edition. Someone seems to have scanned a library copy and uploaded it to the Kindle system without cleaning it up at all. The scan was just terrible. So you get page headers in the middle of the text; interrupting reading on every page. Lines are broken at arbitrary places. Page numbers randomly inserted into the text. There are lots of typos where the OCR got things wrong. Generally; not readable; much less enjoyable. Example (chosen from a random page)Hum. Stay;nymph; stay:Act I Sc.ii.^The Knight of theI have a double gelding; colored bay; 120Sprung by his father from Barbarian kind; Another for myself; though somewhat blind; Yet true as trusty treeLuce. T am satisfied;I kid you not. Again; highly recommended to choose another edition.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Not a bad book and quite entertainingBy menaechmiHad to read it for a British Renaissance Literature Class. Not a bad book and quite entertaining; but definitely one of those books I wouldnt have found on my own.I would put it at a mixture between Shakespeare and Chaucer for those looking to read it.1 of 2 people found the following review helpful. needed it for classBy SabineThis was a book I needed for a class - it has some funny moments; but on the whole "not my cup of tea"