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Word: stagings (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...Dramatic Club will hold its annual fall open meeting in the Trophy Room of the Union on Thursday afternoon at 5 o'clock. There will be talks by the officers on the aims and purposes of the Club; and candidates for the stage, business, acting, and managerial ends of the organization are asked to attend. All members of the University who are in any way interested in dramatics are also cordially invited...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DRAMATIC CLUB'S FALL MEETING | 10/28/1913 | See Source »

...Little Theatre of Philadelphia aims to do what Winthrop Ames's Little Theatre of New York is doing, but on a smaller scale. It is under the stage direction of Frank Reicher who was coach of the Dramatic Club three years ago. When Percy MacKaye's "Scarecrow" was put on the professional stage, he took the part which T. M. Spelman '13 created when it was acted here...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: New Play by Mr. C. Andrews | 10/20/1913 | See Source »

...November 13, December 11, 1913; January 15, February 5, February 26, March 26, and April 23, 1914. Tickets for the whole series at $7, or single tickets at $1, may be obtained at Kent's University Bookstore, Harvard Square. Special students' tickets, which admit to the gallery over the stage, may be bought at 25 cents each at the box office the night of the concert...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: First Symphony Concert Tonight | 10/16/1913 | See Source »

...preparations for this production have been lavish in the extreme; but extreme refinement of taste is everywhere evident, both in stage artistry and in stage direction. Mr. Hopkins deserves support in a rare undertaking toward the best that can be done in dramatic representation...

Author: By I. L. Winter., | Title: "EVANGELINE" DRAWS PRAISE | 10/10/1913 | See Source »

...play, as would be expected, is not dramatic, though it has a few brief dramatic moments. It is a succession of stage pictures, pictures that are a marvel of stage craft--pictures with reality, with geographical and historical interest, and at times of rare loveliness. The sprightly opening scenes take us to the old French colony of Nova Scotia, with the spinning wheel and the quaint costumes of Acadian peasants. The soft sylvan scene representing a shore of the southern Mississippi has peculiar charm, and the weirdness of the Indian wigwam and the trapper's hut in the wilds...

Author: By I. L. Winter., | Title: "EVANGELINE" DRAWS PRAISE | 10/10/1913 | See Source »

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