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Some very funny people have happened to Plautus on his way from the Loeb Library to the Loeb Drama Center. They are, in chronological order, Erich Segal, David S. Cole, Drew DeShong, Samuel Abbott, Kenneth Tigar and Patricia Fay. Among them, and with the help of several others, and with the help of several others, these wonderful people have made of the Braggart Warrior an exuberant, filthy, and altogether magnificent show...

Author: By Anthony Hiss, | Title: The Braggart Warrior | 4/24/1963 | See Source »

...then, Richard III is no pip and Abbott did well enough by that, and with, generally speaking, a much less effective cast. Lynn Milgrim, the Juno of this Juno, for instance, could not be better: business-like in her work, gruff in her joy, searing in her grief. Patricia Fay is an honest, spirited Mary Boyle, at once demure and uncompromising. Sheila Forde who appears briefly as the bereaved Mrs. Tancred, impresses one with the genuineness of her lament...

Author: By Anthony Hiss, | Title: Juno and the Paycock | 3/22/1963 | See Source »

...Areeda, an assistant special counsel to former President Eisenhower before joining the Law Faculty as assistant professor in 1961, received summa cum laude distinction on both his undergraduate and law school degrees. He was note editor of the Law Review and was awarded the Sears Prize and the Fay Diploma, the highest academic honors of Law School...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Duehay Appointed As Assistant Dean For Education School | 1/23/1963 | See Source »

...Misses Fay and Ware actually don't have to go it alone all the way; at times Cheever makes the puzzling role of Steve Canfield (half charmer, half shyster) coherent, and Ninotchka's infatuation becomes reasonably credible; and as the three Russian stooges, Ivanov, Brankov and Bibinsky (Hail Bibinsky!), Ken Howland, John Kemp and Toby Walker have their moments. They are the real burlesque comedians, and in the scenes that have received some direction, they are very funny indeed. And, as the door-man of the ritzy hotel where capitalism (and Canfield) seduce Ninotchka, Geoffrey Cowan is the only believable...

Author: By Michael W. Schwartz, | Title: Silk Stockings | 12/8/1962 | See Source »

...Soviet humor (reference is made to an epic "Ode to a Tractor") is only crude today. Someone made an odd choice in selecting Silk Stockings, and perhaps they've done as well by it as anyone could. But the charm of this year's Drumbeats show is all Pat Fay's--and the excitement of the production is in its color and gaiety, not in any substance...

Author: By Michael W. Schwartz, | Title: Silk Stockings | 12/8/1962 | See Source »

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