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Cosa (chi) è legitimate$44002$ - definizione

PERFORMANCES OF THE CLASSICS SUCH AS SHAKESPEARE
Legitimate stage; Illegitimate theatre; Legitimate Theater; Legitimate theater; Legitimate drama

Legitimate theatre         
Legitimate theatre is live performance that relies almost entirely on diegetic elements, with actors performing through speech and natural movement.Joyce M.
Legitimate expectation         
  • Privy Council]] held it was a breach of a procedural legitimate expectation for the [[Director of Immigration]] not to fulfil an undertaking to give an illegal immigrant a chance to make representations before deciding to deport him.
  • H.M. King George the Fifth]] Gateway of [[The Leys School]] in [[Cambridge]], UK. In a 1999 case, ''ex parte Begbie'', a schoolgirl admitted to the school under a state-funded assisted places scheme claimed her legitimate expectation had been breached after the scheme was cancelled. In its judgment, the [[Court of Appeal of England and Wales]] noted it is unnecessary for applicants to show they have relied on public bodies' representations to their detriment to establish legitimate expectations. However, where detrimental reliance is absent, courts will only protect a legitimate expectation in exceptional cases.
  • [[F. W. Pomeroy]]'s 1906 statue of [[Lady Justice]] on the dome of the [[Old Bailey]] in London. The doctrine of legitimate expectation is viewed as an offshoot of [[natural justice]].
  • Wonford Road in [[Exeter]], UK. Near this place along the same road is the [[Royal Devon and Exeter NHS Foundation Trust]]'s Mardon Neuro-Rehabilitation Centre. When it was known as Mardon House, its threatened closure led to a 1999 judgment, ''ex parte Coughlan'', in which the Court of Appeal said a disabled resident's legitimate expectation that she would have a "home for life" there had been breached by a health authority then managing the facility.
LEGAL DOCTRINE REGARDING PROVIDED RIGHTS AND SERVICES
Legitimate expectations; Principle of legitimate expectations; Principle of protection of legitimate expectations
The doctrine of legitimate expectation was first developed in English law as a ground of judicial review in administrative law to protect a procedural or substantive interest when a public authority rescinds from a representation made to a person. It is based on the principles of natural justice and fairness, and seeks to prevent authorities from abusing power.
Committee for the Defense of Legitimate Rights         
A SAUDI DISSIDENT GROUP CREATED IN 1993 WHICH OPPOSED THE SAUDI GOVERNMENT AS UN-ISLAMIC
CDLR; Committee for the defense of legitimate rights
The Committee for the Defense of Legitimate Rights (CDLR; Arabic: لجنة الدفاع عن الحقوق الشرعية) was a Saudi dissident group created in 1993 which opposed the Saudi government as un-Islamic.

Wikipedia

Legitimate theatre

Legitimate theatre is live performance that relies almost entirely on diegetic elements, with actors performing through speech and natural movement. Traditionally, performances of such theatre were termed legitimate drama, while the abbreviation the legitimate refers to legitimate theatre or drama and legit is a noun referring both to such dramas and actors in these dramas. Legitimate theatre and dramas are contrasted with other types of stage performance such as musical theatre, farce, revue, melodrama, burlesque and vaudeville, as well as recorded performances on film and television.

Diegetic elements are internal, or related to the imaginary world the characters of the play are depicting. Musical accompaniment that is done for effect on the audience, but not supposed to be part of the experience of the characters in the play, is a non-diegetic element; dancing by characters who are actually portrayed as attending a dance is diegetic; while dancing for the benefit of the audience, as in a revue or musical, is non-diegetic. Opera, musicals, dance shows and concerts all depend on non-diegetic elements, while legitimate theater relies only on actors' spoken words and movements to relate a story. Legitimate theater typically relies on the talents of a small group of actors, or even a single actor, rather than a large, choreographed cast.

An example of the difference between legitimate theater and non-legitimate theater is the William Shakespeare play Romeo and Juliet compared with its modern adaptation for the musical West Side Story. In Shakespeare's play, the only dancing takes place at a ball where Romeo and Juliet meet. A sword fight is portrayed realistically, without singing or dancing. On the other hand, in West Side Story much of the plot is delivered in song, and a gang fight is portrayed through an elaborate dance.