In my theater company, the masking curtains that hide the sides of the stage where the actors wait are call “legs.” I was in one show where this curtain got caught on a piece of scenery as they were moving it in place and ripped it almost completely in half. We had lots of fun making jokes about breaking a “leg.”
In german, you say “Hals-und Beinbruch” lit.break your neck and leg, and my godmother who’s german told this to her daughter when she had exams, and her fellow students thought that she was cursing her!
i_am_the_jam about 9 years ago
I never understood why they say that…
Plods with ...™ about 9 years ago
Fortunately it was only the chair leg.
Comic Minister Premium Member about 9 years ago
Oh boy.
hippogriff about 9 years ago
Leo AutodidactThe Evil Eye, a demon, not a god.
erin.adamic Premium Member about 9 years ago
Doesn’t look like he had much of an audience, anyway …
abbybookcase about 9 years ago
hopefully, the evening show will be smoother
contralto2b about 9 years ago
In my theater company, the masking curtains that hide the sides of the stage where the actors wait are call “legs.” I was in one show where this curtain got caught on a piece of scenery as they were moving it in place and ripped it almost completely in half. We had lots of fun making jokes about breaking a “leg.”
hippogriff about 9 years ago
contralto2bNot the etymology, but a great line under the circumstances.
Uskoke about 9 years ago
In german, you say “Hals-und Beinbruch” lit.break your neck and leg, and my godmother who’s german told this to her daughter when she had exams, and her fellow students thought that she was cursing her!