Word: craige
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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There are three outstanding dramatic institutions in the world today: the Moscow Art Theatre, Gordon Craig of England, Max Reinhardt of Germany. Almost everything that we owe to the modern developments in the theatre-to Realism, to Naturalism, to Expressionism, to the revolution in stage setting, scene designing, lighting, grouping, producing, directing, in short, to the whole new art of the drama, can be traced to these three sources...
...however, can deny the value of the book, and its serial predecessors in "The Baseball Nine Books," as a series of trenchant treatises on scholastic morality. The scrivener to whom the beginnings of the series are ascribed is Christy Mathewson. His titles read: Pitcher Pollock, Catcher Craig, First Base Faulkner, Second Base Sloan. The array leads one to anticipate Shortstop Sutphen, Left Fielder Lumley, Center Fielder Cathcart and Right Fielder Rabinowitz...
...first Harvard prize play competition was conducted by the Castle Square Theatre of Boston twelve years ago. For several years Mr. J. W. Craig '75 offered the prize annually. Then for two years Mr. Oliver Morosco made the offer, being succeeded last year by the Belmont Theatre. Among the prize-winning plays in the past have been "Believe Me, Xantippe," by Mr. J. Frederick Ballard '11; "Common Clay," by Mr. Cleves Kincaid; "Mama's Affair," by Miss Rachel Barton Butler; and "You and I," by Mr. Philip Barry, which was produced in New York on February 19, last...
...York American, warring upon City Comptroller Charles L. Craig (foe to Mayor Hylan), prints each day a short editorial headed: "The Calendar of a Man Who Failed." The editorial discusses Mr. Craig passionately. And invariably the last two sentences are: "Number of days in office-1,881 (or whatever the figure happens to be). Number of days in office without doing anything...
Tonight at 6.30 o'clock in the club library, Marion Craig Wentworth, the well-known authoress of "War Brides" will read from her new pageant play "The Dreamers", a peace drama which is to be produced in January at the Boston Opera House. This reading is not a part of the regular schedule of speakers of the Liberal Club. The purpose of the reading is to interest people in the coming pageant, and to find two persons who will be willing to take part in it. The meeting will therefore be open to the public...