Word: sullivans
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...Josephine Knowles”—in lipstick, wig, and billowing ball gown—at the Gala celebration of the merger in October 1999. Knowles and then-Provost Harvey V. “Buttercup” Fineberg ’67 serenaded the dignitaries with Gilbert and Sullivan songs personally rewritten for the occasion...
...really awesome,” she says. “I made kind of arbitrary decisions about where to go to school, and that was actually one of the factors.” Bray also plays the percussion in the Harvard Pops Orchestra and the Gilbert and Sullivan pit. However, her experience with THUD allows her to explore and challenge herself in ways that playing percussion in a traditional orchestra cannot. She enjoys taking on the challenging pieces that THUD performs, utilizing all percussion parts. Bray believes that, for percussionists who participated in innovative ensembles similar to THUD...
...wife appeared to have nothing but “bulbes” in her kitchen, despite Caplan’s extensive pleas for an omelette through the song “Bulbes.” The cast also included Eliora Noetzel ’10, producer Rory M. Sullivan ’09, and Dani Green ’09 of the Longy School of Music. No Yiddish play would be complete without a band to showcase some original tunes. Harvard’s own “L’Chaim Lounge Band”—compromised...
...world where Botticellian references are fetishized and primary colors are scoffed at, “Patience” may be required. Any Gilbert and Sullivan experience can be slightly overwhelming, but the Harvard-Radcliffe Gilbert and Sullivan Players succeed in making Victorian operetta engaging and accessible for a twenty-first century audience. “Patience, or Bunthorne’s Bride,” which ran at the Agassiz Theatre April 3-12, was an ambitious project, but the Players, under director David S. Jewett ’08, engaged the audience from the moment the conductor invited them...
...judgment, handed down by Lord Justice Moses and Justice Sullivan, censured Robert Wardle, director of the SFO, for allowing threats made by Saudi officials to scupper the probe into allegations of bribery. The Blair government called a halt to that investigation in December 2006, a decision it insisted was made purely in the interest of national security. The court was scathingly unconvinced. "No one, whether within this country or outside, is entitled to interfere with the course of our justice," the judges ruled. "It is the failure of Government and [Wardle] to bear that essential principle in mind that justifies...