Dictionary.com
Thesaurus.com
Showing results for biodrama. Search instead for Diodrast.

biodrama

American  
[bahy-oh-drah-muh, -dram-uh] / ˈbaɪ oʊˌdrɑ mə, -ˌdræm ə /

noun

Television.
  1. a drama based on the life of an actual person or persons.


Etymology

Origin of biodrama

bio- (in sense “biographical”) + drama

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

‘Amadeus’ Live in Concert The music of Mozart will fill the air as the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the Pacific Chorale perform live-to-picture to accompany Miloš Forman’s Oscar-winning 1984 biodrama about the 18th-century Austrian composer.

From Los Angeles Times • Aug. 18, 2022

This is no conventional biodrama about the tortured artist, but very much the film that lovers of Wallace’s dazzlingly perspicacious fiction and essays would want.

From Washington Times • Jul. 28, 2015

The biodrama about the 18th-century hymn writer John Newton was the lowest-grossing of the 29 shows on Broadway last week, taking in $321,914.

From New York Times • Jul. 20, 2015

It is helped by a weak slate of challengers, though Lucky Guy — Nora Ephron’s slender but enjoyable biodrama on New York newspaper columnist Mike McAlary — would be a better choice.

From Time • Jun. 8, 2013

ABC's Elvis, though a failure in the ratings, deconstructed the rock king's life into fresh, evocative snippets of biodrama.

From Time Magazine Archive