Word: graefe
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Major efforts next fall will center around the production of an original script, yet to be written by a College student. Roger A. Graef '57, the organization's new vice-president in charge of productions, yesterday announced that the film group would open a competition for the script at the beginning of the fall term...
...fight through a series of conversations with many of the eminent and some of the obscure people of her era. If such a treatment lacks the tension of a plot, it still gave the writer an opportunity to display her talent for humor, and permitted stage director Roger Graef to fill the huge Sanders Theatre platform with crowds of colorful people...
Alice B. Toklas, 20th century Boswell, confidante, and incidentally, author of a remarkable cookbook, eventually got her can opener. When she heard of the prospective production of The Mother of Us All, she wrote Roger Graef, Eliot House junior who is staging the opera: "The opera is based on the indignation G. S. felt at the shabby way the Massachusetts abolitionists treated her. Gertrude S. considered the play clear to a literal reading...
...successful use of arena staging in a House dining hall was the major achievement of the evening, and credit for this must go to theatre designer Llewellyn Bigelow and director Roger Graef. It appeared from last night's performance that there are certain problems of access to the stage and blocking still to be solved, but Graef's originality of handling has exploited all the advantages of the arena, even if it has not escaped all its pitfalls...
...depths of insignificance, Edith Stein changed. She who had often been cool and aloof found herself wearing a red wig and performing a Chaucerian skit during a convent entertainment; she who had been intolerant of weakness learned charity by falling asleep during meditation. In time, says Author Graef, "Edith Stein became a perfectly harmonious spiritual personality...