Word: hodgson
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...It’s fantastic to get to work with the professionals at the American Repertory Theater,” says Harvard-Radcliffe Dramatic Club (HRDC) president Bobby A. Hodgson ’05. “I wouldn’t claim to any specific understood benefits,” he qualifies, “but there are some great people in the theater world that as president I get to come in contact with...
...Hodgson says that the group will continue to have open meetings and attempt to maintain contact with faculty and administrators as the concentration is planned. The group has a very flexible attitude, but wants to assert that multifarious student opinions are incorporated into the most ideal situation...
...Certainly, there’s a lot of excitement about anything that might expand the range of courses available that focus on theater or performance,” says outgoing HRDC President Bobby A. Hodgson ’05. “Our current Dramatic Arts course offerings are fantastic and obviously, the idea of adding even more courses appeals to a lot of people. At the same time, the current system seems great to many in the HRDC. Would anything be lost or altered from what is currently available...
...guardedly tender one moment, ambitious another, and occasionally terrified—are earnest and comprehensible, and Fredricks does a commendable job portraying the complexities of a weak personality under stress. Slightly less can be said of the female lead, Joe’s love interest. Though Liesje A. Hodgson ’08 is dealt a pretty bum hand in the character of Darlene, the shy, not-so-bright, doe-eyed Midwestern girl who winds up in the Naked City, her tender heart and emotional wounds standing soft relief against its jagged skyline, she also doesn?...
...delivers a poorly-written monologue very well), prostitutes (Alexandra C. Palma ’08 and Carla M. Borras ’05) junkies and others in creating a convincing atmosphere of 1960’s urban decay. Three standout supporting actors are uniquely worth mentioning. Bobby A. Hodgson ’05 is wonderfully frenetic as the aptly-named Dopey, who delivers a sparkling and drug-crazed monologue, and Josh C. Phillips ’07’s burnt out heroin-addict Fick is both hilarious and sad. Scottie Thompson’s Ann, a dragon-lady salt...