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chorine

NOUN
  1. a woman who dances in a chorus line

How To Use chorine In A Sentence

  • Cheered on by spunky chorine Gracie and inspired by the faith of lovely society lady Linda Lee, Cole and Monty drum up the funds to put on a show.
  • Early on, she was a sassy, brassy, tough dancer/chorine type, then as she became a star her image got softer. Weekly Mishmash: March 28-April 3 : Scrubbles.net
  • And he became inordinately fond of various chorines and divas.
  • Dancing despite the Nazis, the tawdry chorines of ‘Cabaret’ provide a bracing alternative to ‘The Sound of Music's’ sugarcoated Trapps.
  • I cannot think of a single West End show that has such a dedicated and exciting gang of performers from the one-line chorines to the major roles.
  • When the U.S. entered the Great War, Ziegfeld, now married to the beautiful actress Billie Burke, decked his chorines out in military uniforms - except for one who bared a breast, impersonating Liberty as shown in various paintings.
  • As two very different ingénues battle it out for the lead, a brassy veteran chorine (Megan Hilty, a true Broadway veteran) and a newbie from Iowa with heart (American Idol's Katharine McPhee), Smash at times evokes Bob Fosse's classic All That Jazz in its gimlet-eyed, gamy yet irrepressibly fabulous and tuneful valentine to the business of show biz. Monday TV in Review: Smash's Opening Night, Plus House, Castle, and More
  • Topical jokes proliferate, flames spout from balustrades and chorines' hats as Las Vegas meets Cirque du Soleil.
  • The second act curtain-raiser, ‘You Took Advantage of Me,’ has nothing whatsoever to do with the rest of the show, but features four of what I think were once known as chorines.
  • Pop-eyed and slightly frowsy, she turns the long-suffering chorine into a study in soft-hearted ditzhood. Times, Sunday Times
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