Word: everymanic
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...given on June 1 and 2. In the CRIMSON of May 16 was printed a full account of the nature of these performances which are to be acted by the Woodland Players of the Elizabethan Stage Society of London--the company now performing the morality play "Everyman" in New York...
...parts in these two plays will be taken by the company which lately performed the morality play, "Everyman," in Boston. Miss Ethel Wynne Mattheson, whose portrayal of Everyman attracted much attention, will be the Rosalind, and Mr. Ben Greet will play Jacques. The performance of "The Comedy of Errors" will have an especial interest in that Mr. Greet will appear as one of the Dromios, a favorite character with him, and one in which he has made great success in England...
...critical insight. The value in criticism of a criticism, however, might be questioned. A one act play, "The Ingrate," had better been a story. As it is the excessive detail and labelling of characters detract from the effectiveness of the incident. The ending just misses being of exceptional power. "Everyman," by Laird Bell is an uncommonly sane judgment of the play of that name...
This evening, at 8 o'clock in Sever 11, Mr. Copeland will comment briefly or "Everyman," "Julius Caesar," "A Doll's House," "Francesca da Rimini," "Iris," and "King Charles I." Among the players discussed will be Signora Duse, Mrs. Fiske, Sir Henry lrving, and Mr. Mansfield...
...through your columns, call the attention of the College to the performances of the morality, "Everyman" which are to be given at Steinert Hall every af- ternoon and evening of next week? This is the first time, in this country, that the general public have been given a chance to see what one of the chief forms of the English drama in the fifteenth century was like. Nor is the opportunity likely to recur for a long time. The play selected shows better than any other extant the development of tragedy in the moral play, and is powerful and moving...