Word: woodstocks
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...designed lighting for the original Woodstock rock festival, for the Boston Ballet and for the New England Aquarium. And then there were 30 to 40 student shows a year at Harvard. Yesterday his friends and family remembered Alan P, Symonds ’69-76 with, among other things, an original composition commemorating the notorious fire safety speech with which he preceded performances. “There was as much crying as there was laughing,” said Matt J. Corriel ’05 who performed “The Fire Speech Song...
...could accuseDavid Crosby of having led aboring life. A founding member of the Byrds and Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, the veteran musician has made even more headlines for his turbulent personal life. Crosby, who appeared at Woodstock, has gone to prison for possession of a firearm and drugs, been in a serious motorcycle crash, gone broke, taken heroin, had a liver transplant and fathered six children, two of them as a sperm donor. He recounts his colorful story in his new book, Since Then: How I Survived Everything and Lived to Tell About It (Putnam), which will...
...Dean] was cleaning out the Agassiz, and she’s found the spotlight that was used at the very first Woodstock,” says Nicholas J. Shearer...
...responded, and on a cold Thursday afternoon, I found myself riding in his big black SUV as we headed off on our road trip. I always knew Alan was a theatre legend. After all, along with other Harvard and Radcliffe alums, he was the lighting designer at Woodstock. Yes, that Woodstock. Since then, he had designed a countless number of shows all over the country and, probably, the world. When we arrived at the open house, Alan was immediately swarmed. Everyone wanted to show him the latest products—everyone wanted his opinion. And I, as a student...
...reaches equal heights during “My Blanket and Me,” an ode to his most beloved object. To him, blankets can be just as addictive as brandy, coffee, or cigarettes. Words aren’t even necessary to stand out in this musical. Woodstock (Samantha K. Biegler ’08), a character this company brought to the stage from Schulz’s strip, manages to do so without having lines or songs of her own. And in the midst of all this grown-up humor, the cast genuinely looks and sounds like a gaggle...