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...this line he has achieved a marked success at the Garrick Theatre in New York, with which he is connected. Among his best-known recent productions have been "John Ferguson" and "Jane Clegg," which is now running there. Mr. Simonson has been connected in his work with S. J. Hume '13, Irving Pichel '14, R. E. Jones '10 and others well known in the theatrical world. While in the University Mr. Simonson was a member of Professor G. P. Baker's English...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LEE SIMONSON AT UNION | 5/10/1920 | See Source »

Company L.--Captain, J. W. Angell; 1st Lieutenant, V. F. Likins; 2nd Lieutenant, F. R. Hume; 1st Sergeant, H. H. Pell; Supply Sergeant, G. Baker; Sergeants, C. S. Howard, W. McH. Keyser, C. R. Larrabee, P. C. Lloyd, M. B. Spalding; Corporals, B. F. D. Adams, W. L. Byers, R. A. Frazier, J. C. Jacobson, T. T. McDonald, P. E. Nash, G. S. Weld...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Reserve Officers' Training Oorps | 4/22/1918 | See Source »

...Chance," written by I. B. MacDaniel, Technology 1917. MacDaniel has been in the cast of several Tech. shows of former years, and this year will act as stage director, besides taking a part. The coaches will be the same as last year and will include Samuel J. Hume '13, Mr. Howard and Miss Virginia Tanner. This year the show is to be supervised by an Alumni Advisory Board...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FOOTBALL EXPERTS DIFFER | 11/21/1916 | See Source »

...pictorial and suggestive effect, and comprises eleven different scenes. The players, numbering more than forty, were coached by Professor Richard Ordynski and Mr. Everett Glass. The leading characters of Falstaff, the King, and Prince Hal are played by C. B. Wetherell '08, F. A. Wilmot '10, and S. Hume '13, respectively, in a way that bears comparison with professional acting...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FINAL PRODUCTIONS OF HENRY IV | 3/24/1916 | See Source »

...remarkable a success the D. U. Society has achieved. It is not merely that it is "wonderfully good for undergraduates"; it is, without any allowances, an illuminating and delightful entertainment. One seldom hears Shakespere's lines read more effectively and more beautifully than by Mr. Wilmot and Mr. Hume, and Mr. Wetherell's Falstaff is something to remember. Further, Mr. Weston's designs for the stage are not merely adequate; they are things of real beauty...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Concerning the D. U. Performance. | 3/23/1916 | See Source »

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