Word: playboys
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Thursday May 4, 20067:00 PM Masterworks of the Renaissance: Motets, Madrigals, and Dances Adolphus Busch Hall7:30 PM Maude and Harold: A Musical Love StoryAdams House Pool Theatre Currier House Senior Common Room ConcertCurrier House ARTS FIRST Art Walk Various Locations The Playboy of the Western WorldLoeb Drama Center Main StageOstara 2006: Arts Intertwined Faculty Club 9:30 PM A Night of Talent: The Third Annual Currier House Variety ShowCurrier House Friday May 5, 200612:00 PM TGIF: Holyoke Center Outdoor StageHolyoke Center 1:00 PM Fogg Museum Open HouseFogg Art Museum 2:00 PM A Tale...
...dozen Harvard shows in only four semesters.His favorites include “Carousel,” his one foray into musical theater, and last semester’s “Lulu.” This semester Martin has roles in the Mainstage drama “The Playboy of the Western World” and in the Sunken Garden’s Children’s Theater production of “A Tale of Two Cities.”Harvard-Radcliffe Dramatic Club (HRDC) member Aoife E. Spillane-Hinks ’06, who is currently directing Martin...
...MARY A. BRAZELTONCrimson Staff WriterThere were riots in the streets of Dublin when John Millington Synge’s provocative “The Playboy of the Western World” was first produced in Ireland in 1907. Running until May 6, the Harvard-Radcliffe Dramatic Club (HRDC) production of “Playboy” hasn’t yet incited Harvard students to a mass uprising, but it does put on a great show. This Loeb Mainstage play tells the story of Christy Mahon (W. “Hugh” Malone ’08), a traveler...
...production team of “The Playboy of the Western World” wants you to consider playwright John Millington Synge to be the Irish Shakespeare. Sure, he may have lived and written some 300 years after the Bard himself, but never mind that. According to director Aoife E. Spillane-Hinks ’06, Synge’s “Playboy” overcomes its heavy use of dialect and antiquated setting—early 20th-century Ireland—to achieve a certain universality and applicability, even for modern audiences...
...Back then, Bettie Page was caviar only to the purchasers of girlie mags, tatty titles like Titter, Whisper and Wink, where she was the preeminent pinup queen of her day, maybe any day. (She was also the 13th model to grace the centerfold of a new slick magazine called Playboy.) As a movie actress she had a different appeal, limited but intense. Bettie was rich Corinthian leather to connoisseurs of specialized, and at the time subterranean, erotica - the kind that showed women, dressed in black undergarments and stockings, and pumps with six-inch heels, getting spanked, trussed and gagged...