A stunt is an unusual and difficult physical feat or an act requiring a special skill, performed for artistic purposes usually on television, theatre, or cinema. Stunts are a feature of many action films. Before computer generated imagery special effects, these effects were limited to the use of models, false perspective and other in-camera effects, unless the creator could find someone willing to jump from car to car or hang from the edge of a skyscraper: the stunt performer or stunt double.
One of the most-frequently used practical stunts is stage combat. Although contact is normally avoided, many elements of stage combat, such as sword fighting, martial arts, and acrobatics required contact between performers in order to facilitate the creation of a particular effect, such as noise or physical interaction. Stunt performances are highly choreographed and may be rigorously rehearsed for hours, days and sometimes weeks before a performance. Seasoned professionals will commonly treat a performance as if they have never done it before, since the risks in stunt work are high, every move and position must be correct to reduce risk of injury from accidents. Examples of practical effects include tripping and falling down, high jumps, extreme sporting moves, acrobatics and high diving, spins, gainer falls, "suicide backflips," and other martial arts stunts.
A stunt in American football and Canadian football, sometimes called a twist, is a planned maneuver by a pair of players of the defensive team by which they exchange roles to better slip past blockers of the offensive team at the beginning of a play.
The purpose of a stunt is to confuse opposing blockers, which is an aid to the defense in rushing an opposing forward pass or kick. The main weakness of a stunt is that it is more vulnerable than average to running plays by the opposing team. In most cases, the defense will not use a play incorporating stunting if it expects a running play from the offense.
There are two main types of stunts. In one, a line player, who would otherwise try to charge forward, instead drops back, and a nearby linebacker or defensive back charges forward instead. In the other, which is known as cross-rushing, line players, instead of charging straight ahead, cross paths. One of them may follow a looping path that goes behind the other before moving forward (in which case the stunt is called a "loop"), or one may wait for the other to penetrate slightly first, and then cross behind, their paths angling across each other. In some variants, a rushing player will run around more than one rushing teammate.
A stunt is a difficult or unusual feat performed for film or theatre.
Stunt or Stunting may also refer to:
Sunny may refer to:
Sunny is the seventh full-length release from Towa Tei released in 2011 . The music stays in the same electronic style as his previous work, Big Fun.
Sunny is a musical with music by Jerome Kern and a libretto by Oscar Hammerstein II and Otto Harbach. The plot involves Sunny, the star of a circus act, who falls for a rich playboy but comes in conflict with his snooty family. This show was the follow-up to the 1920 hit musical Sally, both starring Marilyn Miller in the title roles, and it was Kern's first musical together with Hammerstein. Sunny also became a hit, with its original Broadway production in 1925 running for 517 performances. The London production starred Binnie Hale.
The Broadway production (produced by Charles Dillingham and directed by Hassard Short) opened at the New Amsterdam Theatre on September 22, 1925 and ran for 517 performances. The cast included Marilyn Miller, Jack Donahue, Clifton Webb, Mary Hay, Joseph Cawthorn, Paul Frawley, Cliff Edwards, Pert Kelton, Moss & Fontana, Esther Howard, Dorothy Francis, and the George Olsen Orchestra.
I looked.
I finally looked to the sun,
And I got sun stained.
I got sun stained
When you looked.
At me, through that glass,
My arm extended.
Only one, the other at my side in a flash bang motion.
Holding a bottle.
It was not of glass,
And it was not of crystal.
I recall it being plastic.
Yeah, it was one of plastic.
You couldn't break it. You looked and tried.
But in the end, it all went frozen.
Everyone else's eyes. Looked straight ahead and smiled,
But my eyes were diverted
I cant say I was ready quite yet. No I wasn't quite ready yet!
I colored on the back of a child's picture, out of sight from everyone
Just like my smile, or was it a frown?
No wait, that was nothing.
When I got sunstained I found that you were sunstained
Everything about me was all
Sunstained
This morning I awoke and I was mistaken
I mistook a scrap of plastic in the wind as a swooping robin.
Yeah, a swooping robin.
Why did I use that color? It was way too yellow, It was way too brown,
It was way too colored.
The day my elbow went straight. I would have sworn it might have broken
It was simply a blessing, the way I held that bottle
My cousin laughed like circus! It was fashion frenzied. Yea, he was so friendly
I colored my hair I tried in once, then I tried it twice, Then I never tried it. I probably should have tried. It.
But then you're simply baffled. But can baffled be so simple?
Well its hardly easy. Yeah, its easily easy.
And yeah, I say it yeah and yeah, I speak in code
But that'll make things simple