Synonyms for upstage


Grammar : Verb
Spell : uhp-steyj
Phonetic Transcription : ˈʌpˈsteɪdʒ


Définition of upstage

Origin :
  • 1918 (adj.), 1921 (v.); the notion is of drawing attention to oneself (and away from a fellow actor) by moving upstage -- to the rear of the stage -- so that the other actor must face away from the audience. The noun upstage "back of the stage" is recorded from 1870.
  • verb steal the show
Example sentences :
  • A similar door, opening into the bedroom of the shack, upstage right.
  • Extract from : « Fifty Contemporary One-Act Plays » by Various
  • Upstage, burned a driftwood fire in a low hearth of rough bricks; Judge Tiffany sat there, in a spindle-backed chair, reading.
  • Extract from : « The Readjustment » by Will Irwin
  • Few are native-born New Yorkers, and scarcely any of them go around with their noses in the air in an "upstage Eastern manner."
  • Extract from : « If You Don't Write Fiction » by Charles Phelps Cushing
  • Single rose-coloured corduroy curtain for archway up R. hung on upstage side of arch.
  • Extract from : « Mr. Pim Passes By » by Alan Alexander Milne

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Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019