Word: breaux
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...than we’re playing her in this play,” Wright says. “But Marielle [E. Woods ’08], who’s playing that part, brings a new kind of strength to it and a new kind of vigor. Alex [R. Breaux ’08], who is playing Father Flynn, brings something very special to it as well. He’s just a very fun and likeable guy.” Wright’s determination to let the characters speak for themselves will undoubtedly leave the show open...
...honor of John Harvard’s 400th birthday, filmmaker and Harvard Box Office employee Michael Van Devere wrote and directed a fictional film depicting the last night of the J. Harv’s life. FM sat down with Alex R. Breaux ’09, who played Harvard, to shoot the shit about the man himself. FM: When you received word that you had been selected to portray John Harvard, what was your initial reaction? AB: Initially, I wasn’t told it was going to be a biop about John Harvard, so I was just excited...
...cast of “John Harvard” started rehearsing two and a half months prior to the two days of filming in April. The movie was filmed primarily at the Hooper-Lee-Nichols House at the Cambridge Historical Society, the second oldest house in Cambridge. Alex R. Breaux ’09, a psychology concentrator interested in pursuing acting after graduation, donned breeches and stockings for the lead. In order to prepare for the role, Breaux read up on Harvard’s historical background. “It was good to know John Harvard?...
...like something that you’d get in Tiger Cubs when you’re real small,” junior wideout Elliot Lauzen said.“It was the kind of shirt I might send home to mom and dad for a dustrag,” Breaux said. “On the front, they had a picture of a wolf, not a dog. On the sleeves, they have these puma or tiger paws ironed on, on the back there’s no punctuation...it’s a travesty to fashion. There?...
...compelling backstory of his own: he started his successful shipping-tank-cleaning business, Boasso America, with little more than "a box of Tide and a garden hose," as he likes to tell people. Last April, after state Republican party leadership endorsed Jindal and when it became clear that Breaux was out of the race, Boasso switched his party affiliation from Republican to Democrat, and he has spent the ensuing weeks burnishing his regular-guy image. Public service commissioner and former state senator Foster Campbell is the more traditional Louisiana Democrat, proud to wear the populist label. But he's little...