OCR Text |
Show The White Sheep of the Family A truly brilliant beginning of a masterful season, the University Theatre production of "The White Sheep of the Family" was deservingly attended by all the excitement and enthusiasm of a Broadway play. This surprise-angle British comedy farce, co-authored by L. du Garde Peach and Ian Hay, presents a matter of manners and morals within a refreshingly imaginative context. The play starred well-known Edward Everett Horton, and was further complimented by the expert direction of Robert Hyde Wilson and an outstanding cast featuring Marion Morris. lime Limit Strength in content and execution characterized the first off-Broadway production of "Time Limit" by Henry Denker and Ralph Berkey. Starring Broadway-veteran Byron McGrath and directed by C. ^Lowell Lees, this dynamic presentation maintained an intriguing, disciplined profundity throughout. Special stage arrangements by Vern Adix facilitated periodic flash-backs, greatly intensifying the impact of an unusual play praised by Brook Atkinson of the New York Times as ". . . an engrossing melodrama that moves into the realm of ideas." Edward Everett Horton, distinguished comedian, appeared in Salt Lake for the first time in "White Sheep of the Family." University thespians Carolyn Burke, John Elsey, and Preston D. Linford stand at attention before Byron McGrath as Colonel Edwards, in the campus production of "Time Limit." -**%; 97 |