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Chorus Girls--C. T. Callander '13, A. T. Foster '14, S. T. Guild '13, W. H. Heywood '12, W. A. Hood '12, H. A. McLean '14, A. W. Rolfe '12, C. von Tobel...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: First Performance of Pi Eta Play | 4/8/1912 | See Source »

...maid, H. R. Morse '12 Mrs. Henrietta Saxon Wells, G. S. Phenix '12 Juliet Marlowe Wells, her daughter, P. C. Squire '11 Hunting Wells, her son, E. R. Kimball '11 Mollicule Hepsipah Kennedy, M. S. Robbins '12 Artemus Poindexter Hopper, J. S. Hutchinson '13 Jed Nevins, W. H. Heywood '12 Timothy Sullivan, J. L. Hannan '12 Chief Shoota-Da-Plock, J. G. B. Perkins '11 Wachoo, F. O. Bergquist uC. Seluta, E. R. Kimball '11 Ravenhead, N. B. Dee '11 Leon Opper, N. F. Coburn '11 Mazie, a soubrette. W. H. Lacey...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Pi Eta Play at Club Theatre | 4/26/1911 | See Source »

...Pondsby, J. S. Pfeil uC. Martha Pondsby, D. H. Barrett uC. Longstreet Pondsby, C. C. Lee '12 Mrs. Henrietta Saxon Wells, G. S. Phenix '12 Hunting Wells, N. B. Dee '11 Juliet Marlowe Wells, P. C. Squire '11 Mollicule Hepsipah Kennedy, M. S. Robbins '12 Jed Nevins, W. H. Heywood '12 Artemus Poidexter Hopper, J. S. Hutchinson '12 Leon Opper, N. F. Coburn '11 Chief Shoota-Da-Block, J. G. B. Perkins '11 Mary, H. R. Morse '12 Soubrette, W. H. Lacey...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Pi Eta Society in "The Cantelopers" | 3/16/1911 | See Source »

This year's Delta Upsilon play is a happy choice as an Elizabethan revival; for few plays of that famous time show so vividly the time itself, as Thomas Heywood's "Fair Maid of the West." Through it blows vigorously the Elizabethan air: the breeze and braggadocio of the coast town and its tavern (a majority of the best scenes, and the real "home-scenes" of the play, are in taverns), and of the lovable, boyish soldier of fortune, free of rapier and purse; the praise of courage and the ridicule of cowards; the passion for fighting against Spain...

Author: By Robinson SHIPHERD ., | Title: D. U. Play Favorably Criticised | 3/15/1911 | See Source »

Stronger than all--perhaps because including all--is the true and honest wholesomeness of the play. A keen judge has called Heywood an Elizabethan ancestor of Col. Newcome; and the spirit of the courteous and well-bred qualities is strong and full in "The Fair Maid of the West." The play is thus genuinely a revival, for it is given practically intact. So invigorating is the courageous, open-air climate that even the most arrant coward is shamed out of his cowardice into as energetic courage; the returning Captain Goodlack, who is much tempted to gainful villany, is too conscious...

Author: By Robinson SHIPHERD ., | Title: D. U. Play Favorably Criticised | 3/15/1911 | See Source »

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