Word: jugo
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...performances in “Cloud Nine” are generally good, but not good enough to make the three hours rewarding. The gender and character transformations between the first and second acts give the actors an opportunity to prove their versatility. Jugo Kapetanovic ’07, in drag during the first act, walks the line between funny and gratingly typical with his obnoxiously squeaky voice, but he provides a solid performance in the second act. Jakim plays both an energetic little boy and a conservative divorcee well. Rob D. Salas ’08 is almost aggravating...
...They do a nice job of it, too. Their scenes with King Alonso’s servants Stefano (Jugo Kapetanovic ’07) and Trinculo (Molly O. Fitzpatrick ’11), to whom they swear an ill-fated allegiance, are very funny. Fitzpatrick, who brings a really wonderful, engaging ease to Trinculo’s drunken stumblings, is a perfect foil for Caliban’s spluttering rage. Kapetanovic does a terrific job of enjoying his new found servant(s): “Moon-calf!” he calls it/them...
Most donations have ranged between $1 and $20, but a large anonymous donation was made last Wednesday. Jugo Kapetanovic ‘07 walked into his suite to find an envelope labeled “For Hui, a Great Human Being.” Enclosed were five $100 bills...
Hackamore (Daniel R. Pecci ’08-’09) and Raoul (Jugo Kapetanovic ’07) lead a bleak existence: they live in a sparsely appointed bunker, into which Hackamore permits no sunlight, and their only diversions from the monotony of exile are Hackamore’s intermittent medical and psychological crises...
...says. “I meet a lot of amazing people who don’t get to be as popular because they don’t have as much money.” But many students say money is just not as important as who your friends are. Jugo Kaptenovic ’07 says he believes that money doesn’t have to dictate student social lives: “I really don’t feel there’s much of a unified social pressure to do anything at all—campus...