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Show i jN?.:t**\tf, ft J SI' ii i>j~- pfc* "*- JJTr-Trrflw I p*l i * .-^ iif .if i * ; 1 >ss* /T>, X'K'f Wf- ¦- ~*r>r- ~ - 3C~o?:> R*?** ^MZiA, .'^t^-j| ' :,**Sw~,k ^-rSitj, '/.••*?•" ;|;ap- BL *•» fiiS&g « w* ''*¦•'"*" 1 :.J--. > 1|# % '"#; % S--V3- *M^&* X. _»ycy &)^t)R ft+T, .,*•*••": Broadway Comes to Kingsbury Featuring a star of Broadway or Hollywood in the major productions of the season, the Kingsbury stage of' fered Salt Lake and University audiences the finest in en' tertainment. With this as a new policy, the theatre opened its sixty-second season with the aim of providing the best educational opportunities for the student of theatre arts as well as the production of fine entertainment. Seen this year were John Ireland in the recent hit, "Tiger at the Gates"; Walter Abel in "Inherit the Wind," soon to be filmed; Judith Evelyn and Jeffrey Lynn in "Janus"; Basil Rathbone in the intense Broadway drama, "Witness for the Prosecution"; and finally from Broadway came Ilka Chase to star in the "Constant Wife," replacing Claude Rains whose illness prevented him from coming. Along with the major productions of the "Nutcracker Bal' let," the comic opera "The Barber of Seville," and the spring ballet "Coppelia," the theatre enjoyed its finest sea-son, playing to larger audiences than ever before in its history. Dr. C. Lowell Lees remained director of the University Theatre, continuing to maintain the same high standards of past performances. |