Word: donald
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Other included: Kirkland, Bowman Cutter, Alfred Guzetti, John Henn, Frederic Kellogg, Leo Mullin; Leverett, Keith Julian, Ronald Cohen, Michael Reiss, Donald Stern, Earl Leiken; Lowell, David Brandling-Bennet, Charles Bolton, Eugene Kinasewich, Marshall Moriarity, Richard Seymour; Quincy, Duncan Kennedy, Robert Kudrle, Fernand Brunschwig, R. Gilbert Jost, Victor Niederhoffer; Winthrop, Max Byrd, Bruce Paisner, William Grana, Grief Raggio, Robert Benson...
...Phoenix Theater in New York, Donald Madden's Hamlet achieved a record American-actor's run of 102 performances (some believe the figure to be 109). Mr. Madden was also the youngest American actor (27) to be in a major production of Hamlet...
...flaw is in the trying matter of accents in an American production: the lead characters ought to agree on a degree of approximation to the Queen's English and on a pronunciation of Bolingbroke. Otherwise, the Loeb has poured its professional competence freely: there is much swordplay, adequately trained; Donald Soule's stolid set suits the play superbly; the devices on shields are undoubtedly authentic; perfectionists designed the costumes. Not much less, it must be admitted, should surround this Falstaff...
Though President Donald Douglas Jr. hinted that orders from other airlines are in the works, Douglas is prudently working out a novel insurance arrangement, just in case the company does not get enough orders to break even. Douglas' subcontractors will pay the cost of developing the components that they will supply for the DC-g. If the plane makes money, they will share in profits; if not, they will absorb much of the loss. Douglas has already signed an agreement with the largest DC-9 subcontractor, de Havilland of Canada, under which de Havilland will supply $65 million worth...
...Babe's actors, Donald Lyons and Andreas Teuber, have refused to attempt to bore. Mr. Lyons' rebellion, happily enough, has extended to a complete repudiation of his part. He is the Duke; not Shakespeare's Duke, to be sure, but a dazzlingly royal admixture of Hapsburg and Abdul Hammid, of Bette Davis and John Finley, with perhaps a hint of Angela Lansbury and Major Strasser. When he is on the stage, he does not dominate so much as devastate the pretensions of everyone else. He is, in fact, infinitely more attractive than Shakespeare's Duke ever...