{i} theater show which parodies famous people or current events; theater performance comprised of many skits songs and/or dances
A revue is a theatrical performance consisting of songs, dances, and jokes about recent events. a show in a theatre that includes songs, dances, and jokes about recent events (revoir , from voir ). Theatrical production of brief, loosely connected, often satirical skits, songs, and dances. Originally derived from the medieval French street fair, the modern revue dates from the early 19th century with the Parisian Folies Marigny and later at the Folies-Bergère. The English revue developed in two forms: one as the costume display and spectacle of the Court Theatre productions in the 1890s and another as the André Charlot Revues of the 1920s and the London Hippodrome shows, which emphasized clever repartee and topicality. In the U.S. the Ziegfeld Follies began in 1907 and usually featured a star personality. Revues appeared periodically on Broadway and West End stages until competition from movies and television moved the form to small nightclubs and improvisational theatres
revue
Hyphenation
re·vue
Turkish pronunciation
rîvyu
Pronunciation
/rəˈvyo͞o/ /rɪˈvjuː/
Etymology
[ ri-'vyü ] (noun.) 1872. French, from Middle French reveue review; more at REVIEW.