Word: lovingly
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...there was no looking back. Laubacher even served as an intern for the celebrated Williamstown Theatre Festival one summer, where she learned about commercial work in the arts.“The community of great people who were handy but also design-oriented attracted me, but I fell in love with the actual art form,” Laubacher says. “When I got to Harvard, it was a perfect way to get involved in a student group and play an integral role from an early stage.” Building this sense of community was the motivation...
...running, and there was traffic right outside the windows,” he says, referencing a production held in the Adams House Pool Theatre. “This was my representation of Harvard theater. But I thought that as long as there were people creating and doing what they love, then that was all I wanted.” At Harvard, Priour has been involved in an enormous variety of venues, from small-scale productions to those held on the Loeb Mainstage. “I’ve had the honor or the luck to fall upon most...
...shoes at age 11. When she was just 16, she left home to perform with a professional company in Ohio. She then became a member of the HBC in 2004, although for Chin, ballet has lately been eclipsed by other forms of dance. “I realized I love dance, but not ballet,” Chin says. “There’s so much in the world of dance that I moved towards the contemporary and modern dance track.” Though she has remained with the HBC through her Harvard career, she sees several...
...which frequently incorporates parody, quotes, and pop culture for a collage-like effect. “I think I’m a rather funny person,” he says. “I like my poems to include as many things in them as possible. Humor, tragedy, love, time, all the things that are traditional in poetry—I like having them happening all at once...
...music, the modern dress, and the dirt are a way to keep the play grounded in a context that the audience can understand, so that they really see what things are relevant.”The plot, which revolves around the forbidden love affair between Giovanni (Tony J. Sterle ’11) and his sister Annabella (Julianne I. Ross ’11), involves a rather convoluted storyline. However, the upbeat tempo of this production is accessible for college-age audiences. “[We] wanted it to be a sexy, really entertaining piece of theater, as well...