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...representatives, who will be responsible for organizing social and alumni activities for the Class of 1986, include: Jill Vialet '86, Adams House; Paula M. McDonough '86, Cabot House; Stuart A. Raphael '86, Currier House; Steven A. Colarossi '86, Dudley House; Sumy Ahn '86, Dunster House; Jennifer C. Keeler '86, Eliot House; Angela Ferry '86, Kirkland House; Julie N. Mack '86, Lowell House; Cynthia A. Schaffer '86, Mather House; James A. Messina '86, North House; Philip L. Prince '86, Quincy House; and Ellen Fern '86, Winthrop House...
...scenes alternate between rendezvous and therapy session, introducing the audience to Prudence's doctor, Stuart Framingham. Oversexed, insecure and aspiring towards machismo, his only valid diagnosis is the one-liner. "You need to accept imperfection, and I can help you with that." Bruce's doctor, Mrs. Wallace, displays her wackiness through her wild word searches--"derigible...no, I mean secretary!"--which are over-written, though not overplayed. If you want a stuffed Snoopy to bark support for your ability to express your emotions, she's the shrink for you. She helps Bob, Bruce's lover, when he is suicidally upset...
THIS PARADOX stems from a strong point of the production: the acting. In one case at least, it may be just too good. The farcical psychoanalyst--Mrs. Wallace and, to a point, Dr. Stuart Framingham--are played to the hilt by Ruth Bolotin and Adam Barr. Daniel Hurewitz is hilarious as Bob, who sulks, shuts his ears to reason and sings Frere Jacques. Caroline Bicks is a strong, though somewhat monotonous, Prudence, who does not know if she wants a husband, but certainly does not think she wants a crazy one. The candidate for both those spots is Bruce, played...
Cinema 57: 200 Stuart St., near Park St., Boston, 482-1222. Commando: 1, 3:15, 5:25, 7:45, 10:10; Silver Bullet...
Imagine a house filled with books, and then try to track down the one bearing his name. The Elements of Style should be somewhere by the desk where the letters get written. The clutter of the children's rooms ought to yield dog- eared copies of Charlotte's Web, Stuart Little and The Trumpet of the Swan. The Essays and Letters are both within easy reach of the overstuffed armchair in front of the fireplace. For A Subtreasury of American Humor, the best bet is probably the bedside table in the guest room, where Aunt Mary left it a month...