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Theater - 1989-1990

Julius Caesar

  October 2–5, 1989

A play by William Shakespeare
 
Production Staff
Director: Dwight Watson
Scenic and Lighting Designer: Rob Hartz
Costume Designer: Laura Conners
Stage Manager: Roland Edwards-Morin '91
Asst. Stage Manager: Simon A. Bogigian '91
Assistant to the Director: Daniel Lindahl '91
 
Cast List
Julius Caesar: Matthew Hanson '91
Marcus Antonius: Christopher D. Miller
Marcus Brutus: Charles S. Davis IV '91
Cassius: Kaizaad Kotwal '91
Casca/Volumnius: Charles Patrick Tyndall '92
Trebonius/Clitus: Eric M. Hinsch
Ligarius/Lucilius: Joseph F. Longtin
Decius Brutus/Cato: Jon Montgomery '93
Metellus Cimber/Varro: Mike Yoder '93
Cinna/Dardanius: Steve Vierk '92
Octavius Caesar: John Deck '92
Lepidus/Servant to Caesar: Darin Prather '93
Cicero/Popilius/Messenger: Dennis J. Vetrovec '91
Artemidorus/Messala: Drew R. Freyman '90
A Soothsayer/China, a poet: John D. Flak '90
Lucius/Strato: Eric Daman
Titinius/Servant to Antony: Phillip Hoagland '93
Pindarus/Claudius: Nathan K. Risk '92
Calphurnia: Ensemble
Portia: Ensemble
 
Cast List
Lightboard Operator: Diosdado Gica '90
Master Electricians: John Panozzo '91, Todd Perry
Soundboard Operator: Aaron Dziubinskyj '93
Propsmaster: Drew K. Freyman '90
Deck Crew: Corey Braddock '93
Graphics: Laura Conners
 
William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar (c.1598), a tragedy of power, assassination and revenge, presents a broad range of historical personalities as complicated human beings in agonizing conflict with one another.  In the opening street scene, Roman commoners gather together to rejoice in Caesar's “triumph over Pompey's blood,” while patricians, fearing Caesar's growing ambition, conspire against him.  Cassius leads the intriguers; Casca and Cinna convince the noble Brutus to join the conspiracy and Caesar dies by their swords.  The triumph of the conspirators over Caesar is quickly diverted by Mark Antony as he stirs the public to seek out and kill Caesar's assassins.  Mark Antony joins forces with Octavius Caesar and Octavius' army triumphs.  The swords which Cassius and Brutus use to kill Caesar are the swords which bring about their demise.  Last produced at Wabash in 1937.
 
  • This page is part of an ongoing project to document the history of the theatre productions performed at Wabash College.  If you have information not included on this page, please contact the Theater Department or Professor Dwight Watson (watsond@wabash.edu).

Program Note

Photo Album

Poster

Bus Stop

  November 15–18 and December 2, 1989

A play by William Inge
 
Production Staff
Director: James Fisher
Scenic and Lighting Designer: Rob Hartz
Asst. Technical Director/Lighting Designer: Todd Perry
Costume Designer: Laura Conners      
Stage Manager: John Flak '90
Asst. Stage Manager: Dennis J. Vetrovec '91
 
Cast List
Elma Duckworth: Nikki Long
Grace Hoylard: Ramona Zachary
Will Masters: Jon Baker '90
Cherie: Diane Timmerman
Dr. Gerald Lyman: Kaizaad Navroze Kotwal '91
Carl: Charles S. Davis '91
Virgil Blessing: John Prince '93
Bo Decker: John Deck '92
 
Production Assistance
Props: Drew Freyman '90
Sound: Mike Watkins '90
Master Electrician: John Panozzo '91
Deck Crew: John Crook '91
Graphics: Laura Conners
 
William Inge (1913-1973) was perhaps the definitive American dramatist of the 1950's. His plays Come Back Little Sheba (1950), Picnic (1953), The Dark at the Top of the Stairs (1957), and A Loss of Roses (1959) reflected both their era and Inge's sensitive and warm-hearted view of human nature. Bus Stop (1955), one of Inge's best plays, is a meditation on the joys and sorrows of love, mixing both pathos and high-spirited humor to illuminate several troubled relationships. Cherie, an unhappy nightclub singer, is being aggressively pursued by a wild young cowboy, Bo Decker. Cherie and Bo are travelling across Kansas by bus when they are trapped by a blizzard for a long night at Grace's Roadside Diner. The stranded include an alcoholic professor, a middle-aged cowpoke, a high school girl, a bus driver, and the owner of the diner, as well as Cherie and Bo. All of them are forced by circumstances to confront each other and their feelings, with a touching and bittersweet conclusion. This was the first production of an Inge play at Wabash.
 

It should be noted that there are two different programs for the 1989 production of Bus Stop, one for the productions in November and one for the evening in December.  This second production ran in conjunction with the inauguration festivities for new Wabash President Sheldon 正规赌钱软件appttack.  The second program was funded by the inauguration committee, which proudly states “A Special Inaugural Performance of Bus Stop” on the front cover.

-Cody D. Grady '10
Summer 2008

 

  

Poster

Dapple Gray

February 21–24, 1990

A play by: Dwight E. Watson
 
Production Staff
Director: Dwight E. Watson
Asst. Director: Diosdado Galan Gica Jr. '90
Scenic and Lighting Designer: Rob Hartz
Asst. Lighting Designer: John Panozzo '91
Costume Designer: Laura Conners
Stage Manager: Kaizaad Navroze Kotwal '91
 
Cast List
Catherine March-Wright: Dana Warner Fisher
Paralee March: Jamie Ritchie Watson
Charles March Jr.: Brian W. Buckley '91
 
Production Assistance
Master Electrician: John Panozzo '91
Lightboard Operator: Eddie Midha
Soundboard Operator: John Flak '90
Propsmaster: Drew R. Freyman '90
Asst. Properties: Steve Thibault '92
Graphics: Laura Conners
Graphics Assistant: Nolan Calisch
 
It has become a tradition for the Wabash College Theater to produce original stage works written by students, faculty, and recognized writers. Dapple Gray is a new play by Associate Professor of Theater Dwight Watson. Watson's other plays include Eden Creek, staged first at Wabash College in 1986-87 (and since then in several productions), and Diamond City. Dapple Gray takes place on a sunny afternoon in a typical small-town park. Charles and Catherine, brother and sister, have arranged a picnic for their spirited and quick-tempered mother, Paralee March. Charles, thirty-one, is a clerk in a local hardware store, and Catherine, thirty-two, is a first-time mother. Charles and Catherine share special memories of their deceased father (buried in the cemetery next to the park), and they suspect their meddlesome mother's corrupting influence on their lives. The picnic becomes a comic tribunal where the line between parent and child becomes less recognizable.
 
  • This page is part of an ongoing project to document the history of the theatre productions performed at Wabash College.  If you have information not included on this page, please contact the Theater Department or Professor Dwight Watson (watsond@wabash.edu).

 

 

Photo Album

 

Poster

Holding Talks

April 18–21 and May 11–12, 1990

A play by Ola Rotimi
 
Production Staff
Director: Ola Rotimi
Assistant Director: C. Patrick Tyndall '92
Scenic and Lighting Designer: Rob Hartz
Costume Designer: Laura Conners      
Stage Manager: John David Flak '90
Asst. Stage Manager: Jim Bedinger '91
 
Cast List
Man: Kaizaad Navroze Kotwal '91
Barber: John A. King
Apprentice: Diosdago G. Gica, Jr. '90
Beggar: Steven A. Vierk '92
Boy: Eric G. Daman
Reporter: Steven A. Vierk '92
Photographer: Sean Ware '92
Policewoman: Nancy Doemel
Radio Announcer's Voice: Joe Emmick '92
 
Production Assistance
Lightboard Operator: Roland Edwards-Morin '91
Soundboard Operator: Mike Dotlich '90
Propsmaster: Darin Prather '93
  • Props Crew: Saunak Basu '92

     

  • This page is part of an ongoing project to document the history of the theatre productions performed at Wabash College.  If you have information not included on this page, please contact the Theater Department or Professor Dwight Watson (watsond@wabash.edu).

Director's Note 

Poster

 

 

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