Word: script
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...shows recently seen in the Loeb Experimental Theater featured nudity. Six Degrees of Separation, directed by Matthew J. Weinstock ’05, used nudity because the script called for it. Faust’s script does not include nudity, but the adaptation written and directed by Clint J. Froehlich ’05, who is also a Crimson editor, employed six nude extras in the beginning and at the end of the show...
Does this make CBS innocent of liberal bias? No. CBS executives, after all, approved the script and oversaw production without thinking it would cause a fuss. They had wanted a love story about Nancy and Ronnie and--until news of conservative objections broke in the New York Times--they apparently thought that was more or less what they got. The irony is, they were trying to pander to Reagan's fans; they just proved spectacularly bad at it. But if CBS's executives were not floating in the warm, like-minded liberal womb of Hollywood, it might have occurred...
...rendition of the cult classic Little Shop of Horrors, which ran this weekend in the Currier Fishbowl, was a well-acted, feel-good piece of House theater. The Society’s production was, as far as I could tell, based on Howard Ashman’s original theatrical script; so, although its ending was more sardonic than the well-known film’s—in the Currier version, virtually all of the major characters got eaten—upbeat fun was still...
...Annie leave their respective spouses, Max (Alexander L. Pasternack ’05) and Charlotte (Stephanie Jaggers), to live with each other. However, once together, they have to deal with betrayal and jealousy—not to mention bad writing, after Brodie gives the couple a made-for-TV script of his life story...
...both arrogant and romantic, and served as a fascinating contrast to the scenes in which he abandoned his cheer to sob on the sofa. He also provided one of the play’s highlights in his reading of Brodie’s script; as he read, he supplied every element from steam-train noises to falsetto voices...