Word: julio
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Tomorrow evening in the Wellesley "Barn" the Dramatic Club will give the sixth and last performance of its twenty third production. "The Violins of Cremona" by Francis Cope and "The Witches" Mountain" by Julio Sanchez Garden. The plays will start promptly at 7.30 o'clock in order to allow ample time for dancing afterward. After the dance, special transportation by electric cars will be provided from Wellesley to Cambridge. Special cars will leave Wellesly Square at 12.05 o'clock, concealing at Newton with cars for Harvard Square. Tickets for the plays and dance may be obtained...
Tonight the Dramatic Club will present at Lynn "The Violins of Cremona" by Francois Coppee and "The Witches Mountain" by Julio Sanchez Gardel, the two plays which were given at Brattle Hall last week. This is the second of a series of two performances which the club is giving for the benefit of the Radcliffe Endowment Fund, the first of which took place on Monday night at Lowell...
...Violins of Cremona" by Francois Coppee and "The Witches' Mountain" by Julio Sanchez Gardel will be given their initial performance upon the American stage this evening at 8.15 o'clock at Brattle Hall, when the Dramatic Club's twenty-third semi-annual presentation will take place. Tickets for tonight's performance at a special price of $1.65 for undergraduates of the University and of Radcliffe College may be obtained at the Cooperative Society, while regular tickets at $2.20 are now on sale at the Cooperative, Leavitt and Peirce's, the Little Building, and Herrick's. The performance will be followed...
Tomorrow evening at 8.15 o'clock on the stage at Brattle Hall, the Dramatic Club will give the first performance of Francois Coppee's "The Violins of Cremona" and Julio Sanchez Gardel's "The Witches' Mountain" as its twenty-third semi-annual production. The play by Coppee is a one act dramatic comedy of life in northern Italy in the eighteenth century, while "The Witches' Mountain" offers contrast by depicting the rugged life of the present day Argentine "gaucho" or cowboy...
First produced in Buenos Aires in 1912, the play marks the height of theatrical achievement in South America. The play was written by one of the more modern Argentine playwrights, Senor Julio Sanchez Gardel, and was edited by Mr. Edward Hale Bierstadt, a specialist in the Argentine theatre...