Word: actor
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...frightened to come here," Reynolds told a group of about 170 students last night at Lowell House. "After all," the actor quipped, "college students aren't my usual audience, much less Ivy League students...
...graduate school devoted to the teaching of drama, a director, actor or designer may come to rely on his previous knowledge in related fields, or on the amount of on-the-side research he will have time to conduct. But an undergraduate may coordinate his participation in a production with a course related to some idea in the work, in fields like government, philosophy, sociology, economics, history or psychology, in addition to studying the literary and artistic tradition from which the work emerged. A small number of courses at Harvard now examine a dramatist or a play in contexts other...
They are not, of course, about to split on all issues from their traditional allies among liberals and labor. But Benjamin Hooks, chief of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, likes to quote the remark of Ossie Davis, actor and activist: "We have no permanent friends, we have no permanent enemies, we have only permanent interests...
...only one of four Graham children who has been involved with the newspaper. (Lally Graham Weymouth, 35, is a freelance writer and socialite in New York City; William Welch Graham, 30, is an adjunct professor of law at U.C.L.A.; Stephen Meyer Graham, 26, is an aspiring actor in New York City.) Says Mrs. Graham: "I'm not going away. I'll still see the editors occasionally, but Don will be in full charge of the paper. He'll report to corporate like the other managers, but there's a lot of autonomy...
...movie has not come any too soon for most of the Enterprise's crew, which was virtually typecast out of existence. Residuals were not commonly given to actors a decade ago. DeForest Kelley (Dr. McCoy), an actor for nearly 30 years, simply went home. "I sort of pulled in my horns," he grimaces, "and let it roll by. We've gone through all the aches and pains of being in a hit series without being compensated for it." Where is all the TV syndication money going? Don't ask Roddenberry, who nearly went broke...