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Discover LudwigThe phrase "stage clash" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a conflict or confrontation that occurs during a performance or event on stage. Example: "The actors had to improvise when a stage clash erupted between two characters during the play."
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Nor the exaggerated, fierce scowl he sported recently on a Broadway stage, clashing with Kelsey Grammer's Captain Hook in "Finding Neverland".
2.45pm: Hello and welcome to coverage of an intriguing mid-group-stage clash.
Sweden's Pia Sundhage stirred controversy with comments ahead of the group-stage clash against USA, the team she used to coach, declaring Lloyd a challenge to manage.
Amazingly, you have to wait until the show's climactic scene for anything longer than an eight-bar guitar solo, and even then the music is overwhelmed by the smoke, cracks of thunder and flashing lights of a childishly conceived and amateurishly staged clash of the titans.
But a court appointed panel found they were killed in a staged clash, commonly known as "fake encounter", a charge the police deny.
In a thrilling group-stage clash that wasn't decided until the final seconds, the U.S. team was on the verge of sealing a spot in the Round of 16 at the 2014 World Cup when Cristiano Ronaldo set up a last-gasp goal for Portugal.
The Chelsea gallery scene regularly stages clashes of titans, but an especially elaborate cage match is under way right now.
While group-stage clashes between Test-playing nations sometimes underwhelmed, Ireland v UAE, Ireland v Zimbabwe and Scotland v Afghanistan were among the most dramatic games of the tournament.
A little like the attempt to graft Generation Y technology to old-fangled Hollywood panache, their stage personas clashed: Mr. Cooler-Than-Thou and Miss Eager-to-Please never really synched.
The fluidity and simplicity of the production also honors Shakespeare's oft-repeated invitations to the audience to allow the imagination to people the stage with clashing armies and flit from Britain to France and back again in the blink of an eye.
Imber is in turn set against a convent of Benedictine nuns across the lake, a "buffer state" between the abbey and the real world in which Murdoch stages a clash of ideals: religious yearning, sexual passion, and the role of spirituality in a materialist era.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com