Word: authorization
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...first performance of the "The Child", the new drama by Elizabeth McFadden--author of the second Craig prize play, "The Product of the Mill"--will be staged in Boston for the first time, at the Plymouth Theatre tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock. Matinees will be given on Thursday and Saturday at 2 o'clock. The play, in three acts, will be produced by Harrison Grey Fiske...
...drama, "The Child," by Elizabeth McFadden, author of the second Craig prize play, "The Product of the Mill," will be staged for the first time in Boston, when the play opens at the Plymouth Theatre, Wednesday evening...
...Good News" by J. F. Ballard '11, author of "Believe Me, Xantippe," which ran eleven weeks at the Castle Square theater this writer, is a play touching upon tense events which arise in the life of a western farmer's household. "The Wedding Dress" by Miss Katherine McDowell Rice, Sp., Radcliffe, also treats of farm life, but the scene is laid in New England, so that the character of the piece contrasts with the work of Mr. Ballard. It is a homely little drama of swift, unforeseen turn, against New England character in some of its strange phases. The third...
Arrangements for the Dramatic Club spring productions have now been completed. The three plays which have been finally selected for presentation are--"The Wedding Dress," by Miss Katherine McDowell Rice, Radcliffe; "The Good News," by J. F. Ballard uC., the author of "Believe Me, Xantippe!"; and "Ygrame of the Hillfolk," a poetic drama by R. E. Rogers '09. As it was impossible to procure Brattle Hall for the Cambridge performances, the Hasty Pudding Club kindly offered the use of its theatre for the evenings of Tuesday, May 6, and Wednesday, May 7. The final presentation will be given...
...would everybody call all the critical opinions expressed in this number of the Illustrated sound. Most critics, I think, as they have read Mr. Herrick's novel, "Together," have had such difficulty in remembering who's who among the characters, that they would not say with the kindly author of "Some Harvard Writers" in the Illustrated that "Together" is notable for its "fine sense of form" and that it is "surcharged with a life the reality of which no one can question...