首页
登录
职称英语
(1)"All right, boys and girls, who’d like to see some magic?" Twice a day th
(1)"All right, boys and girls, who’d like to see some magic?" Twice a day th
游客
2023-12-03
0
管理
问题
(1)"All right, boys and girls, who’d like to see some magic?" Twice a day the ferry Arahura—and it is greeted with cries of "Me!" from children, and with sighs of relief from parents, glad to find something to occupy their kids for at least half an hour of the three-hour trip.
(2)The parental savior in question is Nigel Kennedy, a professional magician who has been working in the ferry for the past seven years. The facilities aren t great—there is no designated performance space, and he has to conjure more or less in a corridor—but there is room enough to wave a wand and wow an audience more captive than most.
(3)Kennedy, 33, thrives on the work, which guarantees him a level of exposure he would not readily find elsewhere. The Arahura carries thousands of people each day in the holiday season. "Every time I travel," says Jonathan Morgan, manager of passenger services for the ferry line, "he is ringed with kids, like the Pied Piper."
(4)The key to what Morgan refers to as Kennedy’s stunning success is audience participation: every show, he ropes in four kids to help, although they usually wind up being the butt of his tricks. Wands are apt to wobble, droop, squeak or vanish; lossies and hankies turn up in unexpected places. Kennedy is a dab hand with balloons, too, twisting them at top speed into crowns, swords, worms, ducks and donkeys.
(5)The children’s work, he says, is his bread and butter, although it is not without its hazards. "Adults are very predictable to perform for as an audience. They will always clap in the same place, always laugh in the same place. But kids, you can’t predict what they’re going to say or do. Sometimes you’re going to have a little five-year-old who’s going to sit there with his arms folded and say this trick’s absolutely pathetic—some word he’s learnt from his parents."
(6)Kennedy was drawn to magic in the classic manner. "I got given a magic book when I was eight years old and that started me on it. From then on, I was putting on shows in Mum and Dad’s garage and plastering up flyers on lampposts and letterboxes around the streets, probably to their embarrassment. And it just developed from there."
(7)"I remember vividly a magician in a touring show. I remember sitting watching him in this little seat on my own. I don’t know how old I would have been, but I was just rapt. He threw this big hula hoop at me and I had to examine it. I thought, wow, I feel so special."
(8)Since turning professional in 1989, Kennedy has made what he calls a good living from magic. But the business is not what it was. He can remember doing cabaret every Friday and Saturday night, plus a round of conferences, dine-and-dances and garden parties. He still does conferences, but these days, "rather than having a set stage show with illusions, they’re more inclined to hire me for an hour or two, having me walk around the tables, do a little trick in somebody’s hand, which is what they call close-up magic."
(9)He augments his income by running an air order business for aspiring magicians, but admits that the average age of his clients is climbing: fewer and fewer children are taking up the craft. "It’s the competition. Nowadays they can push a computer screen and a magic effect happens: why learn a magic trick? People come along to a magic club and, if they can’t see a person in half on the first evening, they lose interest."
(10)Kennedy’s skill is acknowledged by fellow magicians who have recently voted him best children’s entertainer. But—you have to ask—do people confuse him with the other Nigel Kennedy, the internationally famous violinist?
(11)Well, yes, and Kennedy shamelessly plays up to it: "Whenever Nigel is touring in this area, I make the most of it. I come on stage with a violin case while Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons plays in the background. Then I pull out a magic wand from the violin case and everyone laughs."
(12)There are no plans for a name change, and in any case the confusion is worth it to overhear, as Kennedy once did, someone say: "This must be what that violinist does in the off-season." [br] The relationship between the first and second paragraphs is that _____.
选项
A、both present Kennedy’s performance sites
B、each presents one side of the magician
C、the first generalizes the second with examples
D、the first introduces me second with more details
答案
D
解析
文章第1段很生动地引人故事,第2段开始详细介绍故事的主角Nigel Kennedy,所以D是正确答案。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3240234.html
相关试题推荐
Aspeciallanguagevarietythatmixeslanguagesandisusedbyspeakersofdiffe
A:Thehostessisanawfulbore,don’tyouthink?B:Therosesarelovely.Accor
A:WhereisJim?B:Somewhereintheschool.Accordingtocooperativeprinciple,
A:Canyouanswerthetelephone?B:I’minthebath.Accordingtocooperativepr
"Itisreallykindofyoutohelpme."isa______.A、directiveB、commissiveC、exp
Thereare______deixisinthesentenceShehasmethimhereyesterday.A、3B、4C、5
OneofthecontributionsSearlehasmadeishisclassificationof______act.A、loc
"Theearthgoesaroundthesun."isa______.A、directiveB、commissiveC、expressi
TheRomanticPeriodinAmericanLiteraryhistorystartedwiththepublicationof
ThesmalleststateoftheUnitedStatesisA、RhodeIsland.B、Maine.C、Texas.D、Al
随机试题
A—remotecontrolB—televisionsignalC—televisionstation
Itisallverywelltoblametrafficjams,thecostofpetrolandthequick
角色疗法
期限套利的理论依据是()A.持有成本理论 B.买入价差理论 C.卖出价
香豆素8-异戊烯基和7-羟基缩合形成呋喃环,称为A.角型吡喃香豆素 B.角型香
动态悬浮粒子最大允许数为"≥0.5μm者3.5×10个/米,≥5μm者2000个
肝癌非手术治疗首选为A.肝动脉插管化疗 B.全身化学药物治疗 C.放射治疗
心理发育停滞是引发心理问题的()。A.社会原因 B.认知原因 C.文化原因
N电器公司成立于1992年,在过去的二十多年中,由最初的总资产几百万元发展成为现
急性肾功能衰竭少尿期结束的标志是指24小时尿量至少增加至( )。A.250ml
最新回复
(
0
)