Word: stage
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...production is under the direction of Mr. V. C. Lord, who also had charge of last year's play. The executive staff is as follows: Wells Blanchard '16, business manager; H. B. Courteen '17, assistant business manager; Harold Amory '16, stage manager; W. M. Boyden '16, ticket manager; and W. H. Meeker '17, publicity manager...
...Neihardt, "A Bundle of Myrrh"; G. Pollock, "Fifty Years of American Idealism"; Dr. M. G. Overlock, "A Nurse in Every Home"; E. A. Powell, "Fighting in Flanders"; Princess Catherine Radzewell, "Memories of Forty Years"; Kate Ryan, "Old Boston Museum Days"; C. A. Straham, "Fifteen Thousand Miles by Stage"; May Sinclair, "The Belfry"; August Strindberg, "Plays," 4th series; W. R. Thayer, "The Life of John Hay"; E. L. Trudeau, "An Autobiography"; E. L. Trudeau, "An Autobiography"; A. H. Verrill, "The Real Story of a Whaler"; Edith Wharton, "Fighting France"; C. E. Whitmore, "The Supernatural in Tragedy"; and Dr. H. W. Wiley...
...wonderfully good for undergraduates"; it is, without any allowances, an illuminating and delightful entertainment. One seldom hears Shakespere's lines read more effectively and more beautifully than by Mr. Wilmot and Mr. Hume, and Mr. Wetherell's Falstaff is something to remember. Further, Mr. Weston's designs for the stage are not merely adequate; they are things of real beauty...
...felt that the bounds of common decency were trespassed by a part of the entertainment of last Thursday evening. I refer to the performance of four negro comedians, who, responding to applause elicited by a selection somewhat more grotesque than such performers commonly use, appeared on the stage dressed in pseudo-military uniforms, carrying our national flag, and singing a song certainly not unpatriotic in sentiment but robbed of any patriotic inspiration by the manner of the singers. May a Freshman suggest that such a performance is hardly consistent with the patriotic sentiments of the ordinary man, to say nothing...
...first presented to the public in London and met with a great success. Now, produced in America, one can only hope that the admirableness of the cast combined with the interest in prison reform, which is just now sweeping the country, will serve to keep this play upon the stage for the long run that it deserves...