Word: loeb
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...want to miss this, and anyone unfamiliar with it should probably take this opportunity to remedy the situation. This play, written nine years after The Little Foxes, resumes the story of the loveable Hubbard family and its tale of passion, intrigue, fear and loathing. Opens Wednesday at the Loeb at 8 p.m. Tickets are $5.50 and $6.50, but Harvard-affiliated people get one dollar off on tickets brought in advance and student rush tickets...
...Europe reported the views of both friends and foes of the system, ranging from Milton Friedman to Herbert Marcuse. Ironically, the enemies of capitalism seem to have more faith in its adaptability than some of its proponents. One forceful advocate of the system, Senior Editor Marshall Loeb, who edited the story, considers flexibility one of capitalism's greatest strengths: "It's a difficult system to analyze, and as revolutionaries have discovered, even more difficult to overthrow, because it's dynamic by nature-it has its own revolutions already built...
...Kayl Lots of singing and dancing. See the review on page two. Tonight through Saturday at the Loeb at 8 p.m. except Saturday at 9. Student rush tickets, available half an hour before curtain...
...produced in 1926, is not perhaps the Hope Diamond of the twenties musical--not exactly, the specimen one would choose if one were putting together a museum exhibit on the subject. But it does have its transcendent moments, and the time in between is at last, steadily enjoyable. The Loeb's production has been mounted faithfully in the true twenties style with a vaguely art, does set lavish costumes and lost of energetic dance numbers. Director Josh Rubins has carried this historical faithfulness over in the acting style, too: the broad, farcical characterizations second forced at, first, but once...
...Hampshire, which is near add not unlike the Grover's Corners that the Stage Manager so precisely pinpoints as to longitude and latitude. Backus' George is admirable all the way from awkward adolescence to bereaved husband. A useful preparation for this role was Backus' appealing portrayal, at Harvard's Loeb Theater in 1970, of the similar small town New England teenager who is the focus of O'Neill's Ah, Wilderness! (a revival of this lovely play opens tonight at Boston University's Summer Repertory Theater...