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Couple No. 2 (Christian Holder and Rebecca Wright), in revealing skin-toned body suits that appear to have been glued on, carry out a lyrical sequence of serpentine, limb-entangling maneuvers that resemble moving illustrations for a graduate course in the Kamasutra. The third duo (Susan Magno and Tony Catanzaro) assay an updated version of that dreadful comic cliche of Pigalle nightclubs, an apache dance. The will-they, won't-they jousting ends, amusingly enough, when the girl resoundingly slaps her passionate but reluctant lover. He swats her one right back...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dance: Love on the Rock | 11/8/1971 | See Source »

...Robert Anderson puts the questions anew in the second, longer, and stronger of his duo of playlets, Solitaire/Double Solitaire. (The first is an Orwellian fantasy penned in plastic.) In Double Solitaire, Charley (Richard Venture) and Barbara (Joyce Ebert) have allowed 23 years of marriage to carry them from bliss to boredom. Charley is also caught in the middle of the contemporary value crisis. On the one side are his parents, people of stamina and principle, who have weathered 50 years of marriage. On the other side is Charley's son, who flaunts his liberated liaison with a girl...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theater: Who Killed the Bluebird? | 10/11/1971 | See Source »

Richard Rogers '67 instructor of photography at the Carpenter Center treats couples of Harvard Square and the Cambridge Common--girls and boys, girls and girls, black on white, black on black. Yet whether All-American or all-freak, each duo stares right through the viewer: and bubbled backgrounds and textured doors set off a shallow depth of field, but a great depth of feeling...

Author: By Meredith A. Palmer, | Title: Three for the Show | 10/9/1971 | See Source »

...when the Ivy schools meet outside competition. We win. Some may call it egotism, pre-season tune-up, or coincidence, but since 1961 Harvard has never rescheduled a meeting with a non-league team that beat it the year before. The Crimson only has lost three of its opening duo since 1961, but Holy Cross, Bucknell, and B.U. were promptly reprimanded in the following schedule...

Author: By Robert W. Gerlach, | Title: A Touch of Garlic | 9/22/1971 | See Source »

...when the Ivy schools meet outside competition. We win. Some may call it egotism, pre-season tune-up, or coincidence, but since 1961 Harvard has never rescheduled a meeting with a non-league team that beat it the year before. The Crimson only has lost three of its opening duo since 1961, but Holy Cross, Bucknell, and B.U. were promptly reprimanded in the following schedule...

Author: By Robert W. Gerlach, | Title: A Touch of Garlic | 9/20/1971 | See Source »

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