Cantastoria (Italian: [ˌkantaˈstɔːrja]; also spelled cantastorie [ˌkantaˈstɔːrje], canta storia or canta historia) comes from Italian for "story-singer"... 6 KB (619 words) - 16:48, 18 December 2023 |
Puppet (section Cantastoria) puppeteers to operate a puppet that varies from 1/3 to 1/2 life size. Cantastoria is a form of visual storytelling in which a puppet, illustration, painting... 35 KB (4,256 words) - 00:13, 17 April 2024 |
techniques such as overhead projection, government document expose, cantastoria picture performance, toy theater, as well as hand, rod, found object... 7 KB (822 words) - 06:19, 7 January 2024 |
Cantastoria. Before becoming a journalist, in 1782, Ambros worked as an Italian language master in Vienna and began to edit Bänkellieder (Cantastoria)... 3 KB (208 words) - 03:17, 22 January 2024 |
Giulio Cesare Croce (1550–1609) was an Italian writer, actor/producer of cantastoria and enigma writer. The son of a blacksmith and a blacksmith himself,... 6 KB (749 words) - 05:24, 20 March 2024 |
of gothic metal, symphonic metal, industrial metal, black metal and cantastoria. The name is derived from the protagonist Gregor Samsa in Kafka's The... 7 KB (666 words) - 13:53, 6 June 2023 |
such as GeGeGe no Kitaro, originally started as kamishibai programs. Cantastoria Light novel Motion comic Puppetry Vertep Raree show Shadow play Slide... 17 KB (1,935 words) - 20:55, 22 March 2024 |
Japan. Recent repertoire especially written for the quintet includes A Cantastoria of One Thousand and One Nights for five guitars, Suicho-Tsushimanoraku... 7 KB (944 words) - 15:10, 24 October 2023 |
Michael Hermann Ambros (1750–1809), Austrian publisher and author of Cantastoria Otto Ambros (1901–1990), German chemist and Nazi war criminal Paul Ambros... 2 KB (251 words) - 06:49, 5 March 2024 |