The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 17, 1983, Page 11, Image 11

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    Monday, January 17, 1933
Daily Nebraskan
11
University theatre planning
live semester productions
By David Creamer
With the beginning of the
second semester, conies the
second half of the Univer
sity Theatre season. This
semester, the playbill in
cludes five productions, the
first of which is scheduled
to begin Feb. 10.
This first play, "Later,"
written by Corinne Jacker,
is built around a three
member cast. The director
is UNL Assistant Profes
sor Judith Pratt. Jacker is
the 1983 Tom Osborne
Visiting Scholar.
"Later" will run Feb. 10
through 12 and Feb. 14
through 19 at 8 p.m. in
the Studio Theatre.
In short, the play is
about a widow and her
two daughters struggling to
achieve individuality after
the death of their husband
and father.
This is an intense study
of how women deal with
the dependence instilled in
them by a powerful male
figure, as they break free
from psychological re
straints. Jacker will visit UNL
Feb. 17 and 18 and provide
workshops and lecture ses
sions in conjunction with
the run of "Later." Feb.
24 through 26, "A Breeze
From The Gulf," by Mart
Crowley, will run in the
Studio Theatre.
This play, directed by
graduate student Eric
Boardsen, is also made up of
a three-member cast. In this
play, Crowley, who also
wrote "The Boys in the
Band" takes the audience
into a small Mississippi
town to watch a 15-ycar-old
boy live through ' adoles
cence, adulthood and event
ual success as a writer. The
story reveals how this
youngster differs from most
of his peers and what he
encounters as his parents
misspend their lives.
March 3 through the 5
and 8 through 12, Thornton
Wildcr's "The Skin of Our
Teeth" will run in Howell
Theatre.
For this play, there are
three directors - one for
each of the three acts. Act
I will be directed by gra
duate student Timothy
Mooney, Act II will be
directed by graduate stu
dent Constance llill and
Act HI will be directed
by graduate student James
Haehl. This play has a large
cast, and, due to the nature
of the play, many actors
appear in more than one
characterization,,
This Pulitzer Prize-winning
story is a satirical
tale of the adventures of the
Antrobus family down
through the ages. The An
trobuses survived flood, fire,
pestilence, the seven-year
locusts, the Ice Age, the
black pox, a dozen wars
and an eternal seductress,
as the brochures say, "by
the skin of their teeth."
In place of Alan Niel
sen's "Exit Don Juan,"1
the play originally sche
duled for April 7 through
9 and 1 1 through 16, will
be "The Diviners" by James
Leonard Jr. "Don Juan"
has been moved to the
1983 summer season to al-
m
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UNL
ARTIAL ARTS
CLUB
Learn Tae Kwon Do
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Club Meets:
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7 to 8 p.m.
Coliseum Stage
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467-3383 or 464-9701
low more time to ready
the musical for its world
premiere.
"The Diviners" is being
directed by UNL Assistant
Professor of Theatre Arts
Judith Dickerson, selection
of the cast has not yet
been completed.
In short, this play is
about a friendship between
a young man, slightly con
fused, and a disenchanted
preacher who is a bit out
of tune with his spiritual
life.
The final production of
this semester's season is
Oliver Goldsmith's "She
Stoops to Conquer." This
play will run April 21-23
and 26 - 30 in Howell
Theatre. This production
will be directed by Profcs-
sor of Theatre Arts Wil
liam Morgan, the cast, again,
is not complete.
This is a story of a
couple, matched to be mar
ried by their parents, and
how they are deceived
about the identity of the
other. At the end, Young
Marlow finds out that the
girl he wants to marry is
in fact the one that he
is supposed to marry.
raw
I 1 l
Jeasis
the name. . .
the quality. . .
the fit.
Comfortable Lee jeans, when
it's got to be denim! 100 cotton
prewash denim in Lee Rider,
regular fit bootcut style (with
straight leg arriving soon). 28-38.
Young Mens Shop
Miller & Paine
Nebraaka'l Quality Dtpartmf nl Stores
Sunday 12S & Weekday 10-9-aU tor.
Saturday 10-5.30 Lincoln Center, 10 A- Gateway
u ui ton irt in (Nebraska; SOO-742-774 1
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