释义 |
fit-up Theatr. slang.|ˈfɪtʌp| [f. verbal phr. to fit up (see fit v.1 11 d).] A stage or other theatrical accessory that can be fitted up for the occasion. Hence (in full fit-up company), a travelling theatrical company which carries makeshift scenery and properties that can be fitted up for the occasion.
1864P. Paterson Glimpses Real Life xxxiv. 333 The theatre was what is called ‘a fit-up’, erected in the large room at..a small hotel of the town. 1883Referee 22 July 7/3 The ‘fit-up towns’..are the towns which do not boast a theatre, [etc.]. 1885J. K. Jerome On Stage v, He had been a member of a fit-up company that travelled with a complete Shaksperian répertoire and four set scenes. Ibid. xvii, However, I never did join a booth... The nearest I approached to anything of the kind was this fit-up. 1901Westm. Gaz. 4 Nov. 10/1 His early, struggling, happy days with his father when they took the road with a little fit-up show. ‘Fit-up, indeed!’ he used to say with a laugh; ‘why, our whole fit-up went into a couple of brown-paper parcels!’ 1934S. R. Nelson All about Jazz vi. 135 He spent a long time playing in fit-up shows, with a speaking part thrown in gratis. 1957J. Osborne Entertainer x. 75, I was..on the Irish fit-ups. 1970Daily Tel. 14 Feb. 12 Today there are some 40 off-Broadway houses. You might add another 40 off-off-Broadway clubs and fit-ups.
▸ Brit. slang. An instance of deliberately incriminating a person by means of falsified evidence; = frame-up n.
1970G. F. Newman Sir, You Bastard ii. 75 The ensuing stigma from any hint of a fit-up could be damaging. 1982Observer 15 Aug. 22/5 A policeman may justify a fit-up by saying that the ‘villain’, or professional criminal, had been ‘overdue’. 1985Times 6 June 3/2 Both defendants had maintained that there had been ‘a fit up, and a deliberate one’. 2000Big Issue 17–23 July 12/3 However, within a year he had been found guilty of murder, in what many felt was a fit-up, and sentenced to death. |