Word: joanna
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...eldest son and Edward Bacon as the prodigal were too fitfully passionate for my taste, but again I think the blame lies in the parts. Donald Mork, however, brought his excellent voice and presence to the similar part of the parson and turned in a much better balanced performance. Joanna Brown, too, did a better-rounded job as the sister. George Clark was spotty in the role of the Gardener-Chorus (-God?): at times he was excellent, but he pitched some of his lines too loud and swallowed others. The remainder of the cast did well; and everyone spoke...
Those who appear in other cells in the prison, tapping on the stone to communicate with each other, and those in flashbacks of Rubashov's life, are also carefully and even passionately portrayed. Joanna Brown is a moving and, at the same time, strong Lube, Rubshov's secretary and lover. She, more than any other in the cast, acts with both clarity and emotion. Theodore Gershuny plays Gletkin, the brutish child of the new order, with admirable force, but a little too much vehemence. Ivanoff, Gletkin's predecessor as commandant of the prison, is intelligently and smoothly acted by Michael...
Others in the cast are Theodore W. Thieme '52, P. Michael Mabry '53, Joanna Brown '52, and John G. Benedict...
James O'Neil, as the frustrated warrior, is superb in his slapstick role, and Joanna Brown, as his wife Myrrhine, handles the seduction scene quite aptly. The leader of the senile old men who oppose the younger and more virile warriors is well played by Michael Mabry...
Bowen also announced that the search for Helen of Troy has ended with the selection of Connaught O'Connell '52. Others in the cast include: Theodore L. Gershuny '54, Hector; Joanna Brown '52, Andromache; Charles Humpstone '53, Paris; David Bowen '51, Ulysses; Christopher C. Beels '53, Priam; June Garfield, Cassandra; Jane Johnson '52, Hecuba; and Michael Mabry '53, Ajax...