Answer:
A screen director does not relinquish control on opening night in the way that a stage director does. The director remains in control of pace, structure, builds and reactions as he or she works with the cinematographer and editor to stitch together a disparate collection of shots, score, sfx, cgi, audio, etc into a whole movie. The pauses, builds, responsiveness to an audience that actors read and manage on stage are the business of the director in a screen production. Once the actors have gone home there is still major work to do before it reaches the audience.
The 1980s saw the emergence of dance music<span> and </span>new wave<span>. As </span>disco<span> fell out of fashion in the decade's early years,</span>[1]<span> genres such as </span>post-disco<span>, </span>Italo disco<span>, </span>Euro disco<span> and </span>dance-pop<span> became more popular. </span>Rock music<span> continued to enjoy a wide audience.</span>[2] Soft rock,[3]glam metal<span>, thrash metal, </span>shred guitar<span> characterized by heavy distortion, pinch harmonics and whammy bar abuse became very popular.</span>[4] Adult contemporary,[5] quiet storm,[6]<span> and </span>smooth jazz<span> gained popularity. </span>
Yes they do. Based on how old the artwork is, who created it, and the condition that it is in, determines to value of the aforementioned artwork. <span />