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posledela
4 years ago
5

While directors may be very skilled at helping actors bring their characters to life, they may not have the ability to create re

alistic dialogue as scriptwriters.
True.
False.
Arts
2 answers:
natita [175]4 years ago
7 0

The answer is true. While being able to " bring characters to life" is different than being a scriptwriter.

puteri [66]4 years ago
7 0

Answer:

A. True

Explanation:

I got it correct on the test.

<em>"While actors can bring characters to life, they may not have the writing skills to create their own plays. The same is </em><u><em>true for directors</em></u><u><em>.</em></u><em> </em><u><em>While directors may be very skilled at helping actors deliver a stunning film performance, they may not have the ability to create realistic dialogue.</em></u><em>"</em>

According to this text (from the lesson), the answer is true.

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William Byrd, (born 1539/40, London, England—died July 4, 1623, Stondon Massey, Essex, England), English organist and composer of the Shakespearean age who is best known for his development of the English madrigal. He also wrote virginal and organ music that elevated the English keyboard style.

Of Byrd’s origins and early life in London little is known. He was a pupil and protégé of the organist and composer Thomas Tallis, and his first authenticated appointment was as organist at Lincoln Cathedral (1563). In 1572 he returned to London to take up his post as a gentleman of the Chapel Royal, where he shared the duties of organist with Tallis.

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The death of Tallis in 1585 may have prompted Byrd to set his musical house in order, for in the next three years he published four collections of his own music: Psalmes, Sonets, & Songs of Sadnes and Pietie (1588), Songs of Sundrie Natures (1589), and two further books of Cantiones sacrae (1589 and 1591). The two secular volumes were dedicated, respectively, to Sir Christopher Hatton, the lord chancellor, and to Henry Carey, 1st Baron Hunsdon, the lord chamberlain and first cousin to the queen. Both volumes of motets were dedicated to prominent Catholics: Edward Somerset, 4th earl of Worcester, a great friend and patron of Byrd’s, whose loyalty to the crown was unimpeachable, and John Lumley, 1st Baron Lumley. Also in 1591 a manuscript volume of Byrd’s keyboard music was prepared for “my Ladye Nevell” (probably Elizabeth, wife of Sir Henry Neville), and many more keyboard pieces found their way into the early 17th-century volume known as the Fitzwilliam Virginal Book, copied by another well-known Catholic, Francis Tregian, during his imprisonment in the Fleet Prison.

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Explanation:

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