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...Caroline A. Jennings ’09) beats out Carrie Underwood any day in her rendition of “Let’s Hear it for the Boy.”Even if there is no particular superstar, Jonah C. Priour ’09 is definitely the show??s darling as the shy and hickish cowboy with his ceaseless spout of “Mama says.” His exaggerated western drawl, slouched walk, and eager country boy expressions are indisputably the icing of the show. Priour seems born for the part, effortlessly transitioning from...
...made the play both more exciting and more accessible. “The script moves with a relentless violence and retains Shakespeare’s eloquence, but removes the bulk that most modern theatergoers simply can’t stomach,” he says.Pecci summed up the show??s feel succinctly: “Think the Bard of Avon meets Quentin Tarantino.” RUBBISH AND REVERENCEThis recipe is likely to generate controversy as well as excitement. Any staging of Shakespeare that counts household rubbish as inspiration—“the major thematic gesture...
...speech and images are the universal communicants. “Dancers’ Viewpointe VI,” a two-act recital that spanned styles from classical ballet to jazzy modern, interspersed informative film-clips and spoken introductions to serve the dual purpose of educating viewers on the show??s content and cleverly distracting them from pauses between numbers. The vision of Artistic Director Elizabeth Bergman, the performance ran April 21 to 23. The recital was divided into two acts, with the first act consisting of student choreographed works (by past and present Harvard students), and with...
...return to Harvard.“I will walk with ’07 definitely,” Rennell said. “If another opportunity comes up I might take that but for now I’ll finish school.”Others are awaiting the show??s debut.“We hope to have showings in the club room when it comes on TV,” Harvard Mountaineering Club Vice President-Elect Caroline L. Pihl ’08 said of Rennell’s participation. Rennell indicated that his time...
...dance experience, so we cut a lot of the dancing and focused more on the singing because we do have some talent in the area. It is probably a simpler show than the original,” says Samuel C. Brondfield ’08, who plays Tony, the show??s male lead. Singing and stage presence promise to be the highlight of the show, as both leading actors sing and perform regularly for Harvard’s a capella groups. Brondfield is a member of the Din and Tonics, and Rachel C. Porter...