English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

And who is this Fat Lady

2006-10-22 23:27:49 · 21 answers · asked by Panther 3 in Education & Reference Quotations

21 answers

Operas are long. People used to get up when they thought the opera was over and people would say, it's not over till the fat lady sings. The fat lady would be the last performance.

2006-10-22 23:30:04 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

I reckon the Harry Potter books won't be over until the Fat Lady sings. Anyone agree?

2006-10-23 09:49:26 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

It ain't over 'til the fat woman sings is a proverb, in actuality meaning that one shouldn't assume the consequence of a few interest (often a activities sport) till it has quite finished. it quite is a hassle-loose expression in the theatre of North American activities. Attributed to author/broadcaster Dan prepare dinner, his unique line became "The opera ain't over till the fat woman sings." This befell in April 1978, while he coined the word after the 1st basketball sport between the San Antonio Spurs and the Washington Bullets (now the Washington Wizards) for the time of the 1977-seventy 8 national Basketball association playoffs, for instance that on an identical time as the Spurs had gained as quickly as, the sequence became no longer over yet. This refers back to the impact that on the top of each opera an aria is sung by a woman dressed like a valkyrie. As a achievable exchange beginning for the term, there exists an previous asserting in the Southern u . s . pointing out that "Church ain't over till the fat woman sings." this style of the line became curiously nicely hassle-loose in the South for years, appearing in a e-e book in 1976 entitled Southern words and Sayings. This asserting is likewise hassle-loose in Australia, in lots of circumstances utilized jointly with video games in the national Rugby League or Australian soccer League. it generally potential that the sport isn't over and the two team could desire to nevertheless win till "The fat woman Sings." This actually refers back to the final hooter on the top of the tournament.

2016-10-16 07:14:27 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

a fat lady would sing at the end of an opera

2006-10-22 23:29:16 · answer #4 · answered by kate_souter 2 · 3 0

Hey ! that was the 1st question i ever asked on here,but ive forgot the answer,something to do with opera and the fat lady singing last.

2006-10-22 23:28:57 · answer #5 · answered by Alfred E. Newman 6 · 1 1

The fat ladies usually sang at the end of the opera...plus after the fat lady sang, everybidy wanted to leave cuz she was so bad lol

2006-10-23 10:44:44 · answer #6 · answered by Mimi 1 · 1 0

It's to do with Opera - there were many stories in Operas which more or less came to a conclusion with a female singing - and the hefty ones had powerful voices so were described as "fat"

2006-10-22 23:30:08 · answer #7 · answered by big pup in a small bath 4 · 2 0

Faith is a female hero with tremendous psychic powers. Often nicknamed by her teammates “the Fat Lady”, a reference to the line, “its not over until the fat lady sings’. When Faith is required in the combat zone, it truly is over.
Faith is a superhero in the DC Comics universe who first appeared in JLA #69 (October 2002).

2006-10-22 23:30:23 · answer #8 · answered by amethyst2 4 · 1 1

Often mistakenly attributed to N.Y. Yankees Hall of Famer Yogi Berra—his expression was "it ain't over till it's over"—this popular quote originated in the following form:

The opera ain't over until the fat lady sings.

According to an article in the Washington Post on June 3, 1978, San Antonio sports writer/broadcaster Dan Cook first came up with that proverb about three years before, in response to Ralph Carpenter's statement that "The rodeo ain't over till the bull riders ride." According to Cecil Adams, Cook says he first used it in a column around 1976, but we haven't been able to confirm that.

What's certain is how the expression was popularized. Cook said it on television in 1978, when the San Antonio Spurs were behind in a series with the Washington Bullets. The Washington Bullets' manager, Dick Motta, repeated it, and was widely quoted by the media. By the time the Bullets came from behind to win the finals that year, the saying was on thousands of T-shirts, "fat ladies" were coming to games to cheer the team on, and the proverb's popularity was firmly cemented.

(Motta, who had a solid grasp of grammar, was originally quoted as saying "It's not over... It's like an opera. It doesn't end until the fat lady starts singing and that hasn't happened in this one yet." It immediately reverted to Cook's punchier version in retellings.)

Finally, it should be noted that a Southern proverb, "church ain't out until the fat lady sings," has been found in a 1976 publication. It's not certain which expression came first, and whether one was influenced by the other.

—The Editors

2006-10-22 23:30:32 · answer #9 · answered by St♥rmy Skye 6 · 2 2

It’s a reference to operas. Almost all performances end with a song by a well-built soprano, (aka fat lady)

2006-10-23 16:53:25 · answer #10 · answered by chickamunka_keh 3 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers