horse opera

See also: horse-opera

English

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Noun

horse opera (plural horse operas)

  1. (idiomatic) A theatrical production, film, or program on radio or television depicting adventures of characters in the American Old West; a western.
    • 1952, "Way Out West," Time, 3 Nov.:
      Three new examples of Hollywood's staple commodity, the horse opera, all filmed in color, contain the full quota of galloping and gunplay.
    • 2017 July 7, Ignatiy Vishnevetsky, “The Ambitious War For The Planet Of The Apes Ends Up Surrendering to Formula”, in The A.V. Club, archived from the original on 27 November 2017:
      It's in this horse-opera mode that War For The Planet Of The Apes finds its most rewarding rhythms: in the parallels between Caesar's woodland stronghold and the archetypal frontier settlements of Western fiction; []
  2. (idiomatic, archaic) An equestrian show, as in a circus.
    • 1856, "Affairs in California: San Francisco," New York Times, 31 Mar. (retrieved 30 Mar. 2009):
      The Ravels, after having played a successful engagement at the Metropolitan, closed last evening, and sail to-day for New-Orleans, and now we have no amusement but nigger minstrels and the horse operai.e., circus.
    • 1879, "On the Parisian Boards: Another of Jules Verne's Stories on the Stage," New York Times, 29 Jan. (retrieved 30 Mar. 2009):
      Nor is it much easier to give the analysis of this extraordinary odyssey, which relates the trials, sufferings, and adventures of an ex-Sous-Prefêt, who has married a circus rider, and has abandoned home, friends, and position, to become the manager of an itinerant horse-opera.

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