A script showing a day in the life of an accountant
Prepare a phone record book and a memo. Write down the phone numbers of colleagues at work, banks, taxation, industry and commerce, economic cities, offices, and anyone with whom you have some connections. The notebook records the things that need to be done, and also writes down the process of things that have happened. Control your emotions, don't let others see that you are anxious, and deal with it calmly. I suffered a lot from this. Don't let people see through you easily, otherwise you will be miserable. Compliment your supervisors, accountants, warehouse managers and even ordinary workers more, and brag more with them without suffering any loss. What kind of life does an accountant live in a day?
Financial personnel in every unit should understand this process, and more importantly, related financial software. Currently, companies with a slightly larger scale or higher management levels all use information technology For centralized management, you should know how to use the software and how to set it up. As long as the vouchers are created correctly, everything else will be done by the computer: vouchers - summary - detailed ledger - general ledger - various reports, etc. It is very important to understand the financial process first.
1. General steps:
1. Fill in the accounting vouchers based on the original vouchers or original voucher summary table.
2. Register cash journal and bank deposit journal according to the receipt and payment accounting voucher.
3. Register the detailed ledger according to the accounting voucher.
4. Summarize and prepare the account summary table based on the accounting vouchers
5. Register the general ledger based on the account summary table.
6. At the end of the period, prepare the balance sheet and income statement based on the general ledger and detailed ledgers.
If the enterprise is small in scale and has a small business volume, it is not necessary to set up a detailed ledger and directly register each business transaction in the general ledger. Actual accounting practice requires accountants to record every transaction in the detailed ledger. The amounts in the general ledger are directly copied from the account summary table. Enterprises can prepare an account summary table every five days, ten days, fifteen days, or once a month based on business volume. If the business is quite large. It can also be compiled one day at a time. A short story describing a day in a person's life
I would rather be dirty than have Wan Jiajie
There are many people I admire, such as the People's Liberation Army, doctors,...but the one I admire the most is still The janitor who cleans the house in obscurity every day.
Every morning, while people are still sleeping, the hard-working cleaning workers have already started their day's work. Some of them get up before five o'clock, pick up their brooms, and start working. They clean the streets as always regardless of wind or rain, severe cold or heat, and never complain. When we live in a beautiful environment, have we ever thought about who created today's environment for us and who allows us to walk on clean roads every day. Cleaning workers serve us selflessly. They don’t ask for high returns, they just want people to live in a clean environment every day.
If someone asks me: "Is it hot?" I answer without hesitation: "Hot, it's extremely hot!" Many students buy some popsicles after school to relieve fever and thirst. After returning home, most of them turned on the air conditioner and slept comfortably. The only cleaners, their clothes had already been wet with sweat, and their faces were red from the hot sun.
One time, I went to school for duty, and the hot sun was scorching the earth, making me unable to open my eyes. I saw a cleaner aunt cleaning the school, and she picked up the The broom swept up, and the dust rose up into her eyes. She rubbed her eyes and continued to sweep. Drops of crystal sweat flowed down her cheeks. The sweat soaked her clothes, and she didn't care. , I was moved by this spirit and refused to leave. After sweeping the floor, her body was already covered with dust, and she walked back slowly.
Another time, I went downstairs to play with my friends and was having fun. Suddenly I saw an aunt in a cleaner's uniform sweeping the garbage on the road. I saw him holding a broom in one hand and a broom in the other. Holding the garbage box and sweeping it while looking at the cars coming from both directions, I asked in my heart: Why does Auntie clean it when it is so dangerous? I asked the aunt with this question, and the aunt said: "People nowadays are very unhygienic. They litter the road while driving. If they don't sweep away, other vehicles will run over them." "At this moment, a car quickly threw a can from the window. Immediately, the car in the other lane suddenly heard a "stab" and the can was crushed flat. The cleaner had to step forward and sweep it away. , looking at the back of her going back and forth, I thought: People nowadays don’t know what happiness is. The cleaner aunt works hard to clean, but many people litter, leaving the cleaner aunt risking her life Danger to clean up.
Later, I understood: the cleaning workers are dedicated to the environment of all of us, and they are selfless and unknown. They do not ask for anything in return, but in exchange for a better living environment for everyone. It would be better for one person to be dirty than for Wanjia to be clean. Although he is extraordinary, I admire his spirit of sacrificing himself and dedicating himself to others. In my eyes, they are noble people! The environment in which ancient Beijingers lived on a daily basis
It also refers to the early humans who began to live in the land of Beijing in ancient times.
Peking Man is also known as Peking Man, and its official name is "Chinese ape man Peking species". Now it is often called "Peking Homo erectus" in science, and its British scientific name is Homo erectus pekinensis. Homo erectus fossils from China. Lived approximately 700,000-200,000 years ago. The site was discovered in Longgu Mountain, Zhoukoudian, Fangshan District, southwest of Beijing.
This site was discovered in August 1921 by the Swedish geologist Anderson and the American and Austrian paleontologist Dansky. Excavations began in 1927. On December 2, 1929, Chinese archaeologist Pei Wenzhong unearthed the first complete skull. However, the whereabouts of the skull excavated during this period was unknown in 1941, becoming a mystery in history. The only authentic specimen in existence is a model of a Peking Man skull discovered in 1966 from the top accumulation layer. Later, stone products and bone and horn products were discovered. The Chinese personnel who participated in the excavation at that time included the later academician Mr. Jia Lanpo. With his death, a batch of photos of the excavation that year were left unorganized and kept.
Homo erectus fossils in China. Commonly known as Peking Man and Chinese Man. It came from a cave accumulation near Zhoukoudian in the southwestern suburbs of Beijing. This accumulation was discovered in 1921 and excavated since 1927. In December 1929, the first complete Peking Man skull was unearthed here, and since then stone artifacts, bone and horn artifacts and fire relics have been discovered. The July 7th Incident broke out in 1937, and the excavations in Zhoukoudian were suspended. After the 1950s, several human fossils were unearthed. Counting previous discoveries, human fossils belonging to more than 40 individuals, more than 100,000 stone artifacts and bone horn artifacts, nearly 100 mammal fossils, hundreds of bird fossils, and fire artifacts have been unearthed. A large amount of gray layer. These discoveries make this the most systematic and material-rich Homo erectus site in the world. The discovery of Peking Man is of great significance, proving the existence of Homo erectus, clarifying the sequence of human development, and providing strong evidence for the theory of "from ape to man". In 1991, the Peking Man Site was designated as a World Cultural Heritage by UNESCO. Peking Man has come a long way in human evolution, but its appearance still retains many primitive traits. For example, the skull is low and flat, the brow ridge is prominent, the face is short and the snout is protruding; the average brain volume is only more than 1000 ml, which is only about 2/3 of modern people; the body is short and thick, men are about 156 cm tall, and women are about 144 cm; The legs are short, the arms are long, and the head is tilted forward, giving the impression of being unstable. In fact, the bones of its limbs are close to those of modern humans, and it can walk upright and steadily. Beijingers select quartz, flint, and sandstone blocks from riverbanks and hillsides near their residences, and use the method of striking stones to make tools such as scrapers, drills, pointed tools, carvers, and chopping tools. To meet various needs such as dismembering prey, whittling wooden spears, cutting firewood for heating, and digging roots. Some scholars believe that bone horns were already made at that time. In addition to hunting, edible wild fruits, young leaves, roots, insects, birds, frogs, snakes and other small animals are also daily food sources. Burnt hackberry seeds were found in layers in the cave, and American Indians still eat this wild fruit. Deer, antelope, and perhaps wild boar, buffalo and other large animals are occasionally preyed upon by Beijingers, and their bones are often found in caves, often with clear cutting marks on them. People in Beijing knew how to use fire, and the piles of ashes show that they were able to manage fire well at that time. Based on the unearthed animal and plant fossils, scientists know that the Zhoukoudian area used to be densely forested and aquatic, and the climate was once warmer than that of North China today. With global climate fluctuations, frequent alternations of cold and warm, dry and wet have occurred here over hundreds of thousands of years. Beijingers' ability to use fire has greatly improved their ability to adapt to the environment.
People from Beijing came to Zhoukoudian about 600,000 years ago and lived here intermittently for nearly 400,000 years. By about 200,000 years ago, people from Beijing left here.
Beijingers have higher cheekbones. The average brain volume is just over 1000 ml. The body is short and thick, with the male being about 156 cm tall and the female being about 144 cm tall. The legs are short, the arms are long, and the head is tilted forward.
There is a thick layer of ash in the cave where the Pekingese lived, indicating that the Pekingese already knew how to use fire and store fire.
Research has found that Beijingers usually gather in groups of dozens of people. Life span is short, with most people dying before the age of 14.
In 1987, the Zhoukoudian Peking Man Site was designated as a World Cultural Heritage by UNESCO.
Discovery and Significance
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In 1918, Andersen, a mining consultant to the Beiyang *** in China and a Swedish geologist and archaeologist, A fissure accumulation containing animal fossils was discovered in Zhoukoudian. In 1921, Anderson and Austrian paleontologist Dansky and others, guided by the local people, found a larger and richer fossil-bearing site on the northern slope of Longgu Mountain, which later became world-famous as Peking Man. Ruins - "Zhoukoudian No. 1 Location". In 1921 and 1923, two human teeth were unearthed and assigned to the genus Homo. As a result of this discovery, large-scale systematic excavations began in Zhoukoudian in 1927, led by Swedish vertebrate paleontologist B. Bulin and Chinese geologist Li Jie. That year, another human left lower permanent molar was discovered.
Bu Dasheng, director of the Department of Anatomy at Peking Union Medical College and a Canadian anatomist, studied three teeth that were discovered and gave this ancient human that had never been seen before a Latinized scientific name - Sinanthropus. pekinensis (once translated as "Beijing Chinese ape-man", the original meaning should be "Beijing Chinese"). American paleontologist Gripp (1870-1946) gave it a common name: "Peking man". Now his "genus" and "species" have been merged with Javanese, and another "subspecies" has been established, renamed "Homo erectus pekinensis" (Homo erectus pekinensis).
In 1929, under the sole leadership of Chinese archaeologist Pei Wenzhong (graduated from the Department of Geology of Peking University), a complete skull of Peking Man was discovered on the afternoon of December 2. The announcement of this news shocked the world's academic community. Prior to this, although the remains of Neanderthals in Germany, Homo erectus in Java (see Javanese), and Homo heidelbergensis in Germany had been discovered, these discoveries were not recognized by the academic community due to the constraints of conservative ideas. ; Even among scholars who hold the theory of evolution, there are different opinions on the origin of human beings and the status of these discoveries in the process of human evolution. Since the discovery of the skull of Peking Man, especially the subsequent discovery of stone tools and fire relics, the existence of Homo erectus has been confirmed, which basically clarified the sequence of human evolution and provided strong support for the great theory of "from ape to man" Evidence
In 1937, due to the Japanese imperialists launching a full-scale war of aggression against China, the excavation work in Zhoukoudian was interrupted. At that time, there were only 5 Peking Man skulls discovered, in addition to skull fragments, facial bones, mandibles, femurs, humerus, clavicle, lunate, etc., as well as 147 teeth. These precious specimens were all lost in the hands of a few Americans before and after the outbreak of the Pacific War in December 1941. After the founding of the People's Republic of China, excavations in Zhoukoudian were resumed. After many excavations, five Peking Man teeth and a mandible were discovered. In 1966, a broken skull was also found in the pile near the top. In addition, an upper arm bone and a tibia were identified from bone fragments discovered before 1937. If all previous discoveries are included, a total of more than 40 individual Peking Man fossils have been obtained. At the same time, no less than 100,000 stone artifacts were discovered, as well as abundant bone tools, horn tools and fire relics. The materials from the Peking Man site are the richest and most systematic among the materials from human sites of the same stage discovered around the world, providing valuable information for the study of early Paleolithic humans and their culture.
Stratigraphic accumulation and age The sediments at the Peking Man site are more than 40 meters thick. The upper 34 meters are fossil-bearing accumulations, which can be divided into 13 layers from top to bottom according to lithological changes. They are mainly composed of collapsed limestone fragments in the cave and clay, silt sand and other residues brought into the cave by running water. Among the piles are ashes left by fires used by Beijingers. There are four larger ash layers, and the thickest part of the fourth layer is more than 6 meters. Animal fossils were found from the 13th layer and above, and several stone tools were also unearthed from this layer, indicating that there were early human activities.
According to the nature of the animal fossils, the age of layers 11 to 13 is equivalent to that of Zhoukoudian Site 13, about 1.5 kilometers south of the site. The latter is also a cave accumulation, and stone artifacts, ashes, burned bones and mammal fossils were found. It is the earliest remains in the Zhoukoudian area. The eras of the 1st to 3rd levels of the Peking Man Site are roughly equivalent to those of the 15th, 4th and 3rd levels of Zhoukoudian. Among them, the materials unearthed at Zhoukoudian Site 15 are the richest, including a large number of animal fossils and stone products, as well as ashes and burnt bones. There are not many relics at the other two sites, but a human tooth was found at the fourth site, making it another site in the Zhoukoudian area where human fossils have been unearthed in addition to the Peking Man site and the Shandong Cave site. Some researchers believe that the age of these three sites may have reached the early stage of the Late Pleistocene based on the fact that there are later fossils such as red deer.
There is a development in the study of the age of the Peking Man site. process. At first, Andersen and Schdansky thought it was the Pliocene. By the end of the 1920s, French paleontologist Teilhard de Chardin (1881-1955) and Chinese vertebrate paleontologist Yang Zhongjian, etc., based on the nature of the fauna, determined that this site was later than the Nihewan Period and later than the Loess Period. Early mid-Pleistocene. After the discovery of the Lantian Man site in the 1960s, some people proposed dividing the Middle Pleistocene in North China into two phases: the early and the late. The early stage is represented by the Lantian Man site containing the Gongwangling fauna, and the late stage is represented by the Peking Man site containing the Zhoukoudian fauna. Represented (see Chinese Paleolithic Archeology). After 1976, the uranium series method, fission track method, paleomagnetic method and other methods were used to determine the age of the Peking Man site. It was found that the 13th layer and above were about 700,000 to 200,000 years ago, and the 14th layer The following are older than 700,000 years ago.
Physical characteristics
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The widest point of the Pekingese skull is slightly above the left and right ear holes, and gradually narrows upward, with a parabolic cross-section. shape. This is different from the widest part of the skull of modern humans, which is moved up to the middle of the skull, and is also lower compared to Neanderthals. The skull of Peking Man is low and flat, and the forehead is tilted backward. Although it is taller than that of apes, it is lower than that of modern humans and slightly lower than that of Neanderthals.
The brain volume of Peking Man is 1059 ml, which is between that of apes and modern humans. Their skulls were about twice as thick as those of modern humans. The eyebrow ridge is thick, protruding forward, and connected to each other on the left and right sides. There is an obvious sagittal crest in the middle of the skull, and a well-developed occipital crest at the back of the skull. Pekingese have shorter faces, protruding muzzles and no chin. They have flat and wide nasal bones and cheekbones, with the cheekbones facing forward, indicating that they have wide noses and low, flat faces. There is an obvious mandibular round pillow on the inner surface of the mandible near the front. Their teeth were smaller than those of apes, both in crown and root. The texture of the crown was also simple, but much thicker and more complex than that of modern humans. In addition, the lingual surfaces of the canine teeth and the upper medial incisors have finger-like processes extending from the basal tubercle to the incisal edge; the lingual surfaces of the upper medial and lateral incisors are obviously spade-shaped. The primitive nature of the head storage of Peking Man is similar to that of Java Man, so they both belong to the development stage of Homo erectus. Pekingese have shovel-shaped incisors, wide noses and low, flat faces, and a mandibular round pillow on the front of the inner surface of the mandible, which also shows that they have obvious characteristics of modern Mongolian race
Beijing The medullary cavity of the human lower limbs is smaller and the wall is thicker (the medullary cavity of the femur only accounts for one-third of the minimum diameter of the backbone, but in modern humans it accounts for one-half; the medullary cavity of the tibia is even smaller), but in size and shape The body, proportions and muscle attachment points are similar to modern humans, which proves that they are already good at walking upright. In addition to having a smaller medullary cavity and thicker walls, the upper limb bones of Peking Man are closer to modern humans than to the lower limb bones, indicating that their upper limbs were able to perform activities very similar to modern humans. The height of the Beijing people, calculated from the length of a relatively complete femur found, is about 1.56 to 1.57 meters.
Culture of the Pekingese The cultural relics of the Pekingese include stone artifacts, bone and horn tools and fire relics. The stone tools are mainly flake stone tools, with fewer stone core stone tools, and most of them are small. The raw materials include vein quartz, sandstone, quartzite, flint and other gravels from the river beach outside the cave, as well as crystals found from the granite hillside two kilometers away. Pekingese use gravel as a hammer, and depending on the stone material, they use the direct impact method, the anvil method and the smashing method to make stone flakes. Among them, the bipolar stone cores and bipolar stone flakes produced by the smashing method account for a large proportion of all stone products and constitute one of the important features of Beijing's human culture. In the second step of processing, stone hammers are often used to directly strike, mainly from one side, and most of them are processed from the cracking side to the back.
Beijing people’s stone tools include chopping tools, scrapers, carving tools, stone hammers and stone anvils, etc. They selected oblate sandstone or quartz gravel and punched edges from one or both sides to make chopping tools. These stone tools are larger in size. "Scrapers" are made of stone chips of different sizes, with shapes such as disc-shaped, straight blades, convex blades, concave blades, and multi-edged blades. They are the most numerous type of stone tools. There are not many "pointed ware" and "engraving ware" in number, but they are relatively exquisitely made and small in size. Some are only as big as a finger. The production procedures and methods are relatively fixed, reflecting a certain level of technology. (See the colored picture of the pointed tools of "Peking Man".) Among the known sites of the same period in the world, no similar stone tools with comparable level of sophistication have ever been heard of. Stone hammers and stone anvils were their tools for making stone tools. It can be seen from the knock marks left on the stone hammer that Beijingers are good at using their right hand. In addition, traces of use are often found on some stone flakes that have not been processed in the second step
Peking stone tools
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The Peking Man stone tools, which are mainly composed of small stone tools, are one of the two major cultural traditions of the Paleolithic Age in North China, namely the "Zhoukoudian Site 1 (Peking Man Site) - Zhiyu System". This tradition has been widely influential not only in North China, but also in the Southwest, Northeast and other regions since the Middle Paleolithic Age (see Chinese Paleolithic Archeology).
There are many broken animal bones in the accumulation of caves in Beijing. Some researchers believe that some of them are bone tools made and used by Beijingers. For example, the truncated antler roots are thick and solid and can be used as hammers, and the truncated antler tips can be used as digging tools. It can be seen from these antlers that the people in Beijing have mastered the method of burning the area to be cut off to make it easier to cut off. For example, many deer skulls only retain the head cover like a water scoop, with clear inscriptions on it. Most of the impact marks have been processed repeatedly, and the shape of the remaining parts is quite consistent. It can be regarded as a vessel for scooping water. Some limb bones were split along the long axis, and one end was struck into a pointed or knife shape; some bone fragments had multiple blow marks on the edges and could also be used as tools. However, some scholars hold contrary opinions on whether Beijingers made and used bone tools.
In the ash layer in the Beijing Man Cave, many burned stones, bones, hackberry seeds, and a piece of redbud charcoal were found. There were piles of ashes, indicating that they had managed the fire well. Although it is not yet proven that Beijingers can make fire artificially, they have obviously learned how to store fire.
Natural environment To the north of the residential area of ??Beijing are overlapping mountains, to the west and southwest are surrounded by low and gentle mountains, to the southeast are vast plains, and there is a river to the east of Longgu Mountain. During the period when Beijingers lived here, the climate and natural environment changed many times. It was relatively cold in the early period, probably still in the early stages of the Minde-Reese interglacial period. Animals that like cold such as wolverines, cave bears, flat-horned elk, woolly rhinoceros, etc. predominate among animal fossils. The middle and late stages are warmer, and animals that like warmth such as bamboo rats, macaques, Deshi buffalo, and neckless porcupines are dominant.
The excavation of fossils of animals such as Andrei's ostrich and giant camel proves that there was a dry period here, and grasslands and even deserts appeared here. The discovery of water-loving animals such as otters, giant beavers, and beavers also shows that large areas of water once appeared here.
Life Beijingers live in caves and engage in hunting and gathering. Knocked-out burnt bones found among the ashes indicate that cooked food was known. Under severe natural conditions, Beijingers rely on the strength of the group to fight for survival. Seasonal changes, natural disasters, attacks by wild beasts, and diseases all pose huge threats to them. The ages of dozens of Peking Man individuals measured from fossils tell us that their mortality rate was extremely high, which also reflects their harsh living conditions.
Some animals from the period when Beijingers lived
When Beijingers lived near Zhoukoudian, the climate in that area was milder and wetter than it is now. The terrain at that time was composed of high mountains to the north, connecting the Xishan Mountains of Beijing, and rolling hills to the west and southwest. The mountains and hills are covered with various trees and lush wild grasses. Ferocious saber-toothed tigers, wolves, bears and other wild beasts gather in forests and haunt mountains and fields, threatening the safety of Beijingers. At that time, the shape and size of saber-toothed tigers were similar to those of modern tigers. The upper canine teeth were flat, and some had serrations front and back, as sharp as a dagger. When saber-toothed tigers catch food, they open their mouths wide and are very ferocious. People in Beijing lost their lives because they often fought with ferocious beasts. They go out hunting in groups, mainly hunting skeletal deer, sika deer, wild sheep and wild horses. A short film script of a day on campus
Just find a copy of a youth-themed movie
There is an urgent need for a script about a day on campus, preferably a musical.
The predecessor of Broadway musical is American operetta. Since the 1930s, musical stage plays that combine drama, music and dance have gradually developed into extremely charming The music form has conquered the hearts of music lovers all over the world. In the West, a typical definition of a musical is "a stage play, TV or film work that uses popular-style songs and dialogue to tell a story, or to show the talents of various performers." Musical theater is a brilliant artistic treasure of the twentieth century. "Sound of Music", "Evita" (also known as "Mrs. Peron"), "Cats", etc. are among the best. Many people are familiar with famous episodes of musicals such as "Don't Cry for Me (Argentina)" and "Memory". The United Kingdom and the United States are the heydays of musicals. From the history of the development of musicals From a perspective, London's West End and New York's Broadway can be regarded as the birthplace of musicals. Broadway musicals can be said to be the epitome of American cultural history, and their music is mostly influenced by jazz and swing. ), its dance was also influenced by swing dance and tap dance. Its defining symbol was the 1927 "Show Boat", which described a ship on the Mississippi River in 1887. The story that takes place on the mobile theater ship, the famous song "Ol' Man River" in the film is particularly classic. What marked the further development of musicals was the 1943 "Oklahoma!" which successfully incorporated dance elements. The play describes the love and hatred that took place in the original Indian settlements of the American West in the early 20th century, and the 1957 "West Side Story" was a new milestone. Translated as "A Chorus Line", the musical reaches its glorious peak. The play puts together a series of performances, allowing the actors to share their own stories together. In addition to the United States, the United Kingdom is also the cradle of a large number of outstanding musicals. British musicals are more related to drama, especially the dramatic background of William Shakespeare and Henrik Johan Ibsen in the 1970s. The genius creation represented by "Evita" by theater masters Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice has greatly promoted the development of musicals. The legendary life of Evita, the wife of former Argentinian President Peron. In addition, the French duo Luc Plamondon and Richard Coiante also made their debut with the film "The Hunchback of Notre Dame". Notre Dame de Paris) suddenly emerged, giving a new interpretation of the rich French romance in the musical.
Musicals are generally divided into two categories according to their performance forms: one is narrative musicals (also called script musicals) (book musicals) and musical comedies (musical edy) that focus on plot, and the other is show performances. (variety show), variety show (vaudeville) and current affairs show (revue) focusing on audio-visual enjoyment. The prototype of narrative musical theater is operetta. These works have become increasingly mature in musical narrative form. However, operettas are mostly limited to love stories and rarely involve profound social themes. For example, "The Merry Widow" tells the love story of Sonya, a beautiful and wealthy widow from the Balkan Peninsula. Although musical comedies have a basic plot and are not just episodic singing, dancing and farce, most of their plots and characters are not deep enough. Famous musical comedies such as "Kiss Me, Kate" tell the story of a quarreling divorced couple who perform on the same stage in Shakespeare's "The Taming of the Shrew". Variety shows (vaudeville) are mainly segmented vaudeville (variety), talk shows (talk shows) and song and dance performances, and the format is quite similar to variety shows. Excellent variety show songwriters include American music geniuses Jerome Kern, Oscar Hammerstein II, etc. This form of performance played an important role in the development of early musical theater. Variety shows gradually faded away from the stage after the emergence of narrative musicals. A current affairs show is a song and dance performance without a complete storyline. There is also a current affairs show called French revue, also known as follies, which originated from France. At the beginning of the 20th century, the French original glamor show was fully integrated with variety shows, becoming one of the symbols of Broadway's glory and prosperity in the 1920s and 1930s. In 1907, Florenz Ziegfeld, the song and dance king and top Broadway producer, produced a luxurious song and dance variety show, borrowing the form of the French Magnificent Show, and officially named it "The Magnificent Show."
Please accept it, thank you! The general lifestyle and living rules of accountants
Very busy and tired, often work overtime, and it is even busier at the end of the year to prepare year-end financial statements, usually at home and company Running on both sides, sleeping less than eight hours a day, the basic method of expressing life in drama is
Are there any good musical scripts for virtual performances that express college life?
Character Qingfeng - male college students are referred to as Feng
Baige - female college students are referred to as pigeons (that is, the voiceover)
Guagua - male College students are referred to as Gua
Yunfan—male college students are referred to as Yun
Zi Qiu—male college students are referred to as Qiu
Song and Dance Team—male lead dancer ( (referred to as male),
Female lead dancer (female),
5 male backup dancers
5 female backup dancers
Scene room for boys Dormitory (the stage is divided into two parts: reality and memory, which can be converted through lighting)
The autumn dusk of time urgently needs a four-person short play script that reflects campus life
Sorry, I don’t have it