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The World from Coos Bay, Oregon • 31

Publication:
The Worldi
Location:
Coos Bay, Oregon
Issue Date:
Page:
31
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE 11 THE WALTONS' Kead A IPlay The World, Coos Bay, Friday, April 19, 1974 CB LIBRARY drama, firmly rooted in the contemporary black experience but with a universality that distills the fears, appetites, frustrations and vulnerability of the entire human family. Small Craft Warnings by Teo-nesse Williams: One of the playwrights most searching works. Monks Place, a bar somewhere on the Pacific Coast of California, provides the setting. The Simshine Boys, a new comedy fey Neil Simon: Two old vaudeville comics are reunited. They have been feuding for years.

Amusing dialogue but it is never a mere one-line joke. Two Gentlemen of Verona adapted from the Shakespearean play by John Guare and Mel Shapiro: a re-creation, complete with pictures and sheet music, -of the triunphant Joe Papp Production of the Shakespeare play winner of both the Tony Award and the New York Drama Crit- ics Circle Award for Best Musical, 1972. Plays are meant to be acted out and watched by an audience. However, as a member of a theater audience, you will enjoy watching a play much more if you have read it first. These are at the Coos Bay Public Library: The Best Plays af 1972-1973: Here in this volume are presented all those features making it an outstanding book on the American Theater.

Oh Coward! by Noel Coward: Here is the creme of Coward his music and lyrics, sketches and play excerpts an evenings entertainment and now, a delightful one-volume memento. The Hot Baltimore by Lan-ford Wilson: A thoroughly American play, conceived in the notion of the last Frontier and brilliantly sustained by a powerful expression of nostalgia, with the honest characters living at the edge of dreams recalling a receding utopia; a Notable Book of 73. The River Niger by Joseph A. Walker: A realistic family It's A Woman' World And Men Are Slsry Spacek portrays a young runaway who has her baby In secret, in an aban uJIdwd cabin. episode rf-SSfiraValienc." to be Thursday.

April 25, at 8 pan. on the CBS-TV. KOAC Channel 7, Dial 3 ing. Its very chilly and, the ladies in their bare costumes, myself included, are trying very bard not to let the goose bumps steal the scene. I play Kyla, a fierce village woman who looks a bit like a Swiss milkmaid, what with six hair pieces attained giving me blonde braidsv.lVfa.fr ry fees- (braids are the symbol of the ladies of the confederacy).

Director Marc Daniels, who remains calm and pleasant while trying to decide whether or not to go back to the studio, decides to stay and fight the rain and be wins. The scene proceeds. Jo De-Winter plays the woman who runs the auction and the bidding is between Claire Bren- nan, Coriime Camacho and me. I retire after a bid of six sheep end seven bushels of pain, because one of the ladies has jumped the bid to one ram, and the dink is just not worth that to me. I Like aH Roddenberry productions, this one is awe-inspiring on several levels.

There are the philosophical bits in the glory. There is the imagination. There is the large oast (which also I indudes Diana Mulnaur, Janet Margolin and Christopher Cary). And there ere those fantastic costumes by Theiss made from fabrics that are extraordinary. -For instance, one woman wears a halter top made from a place mat from Poland.

My green and beige top also was of a Polish fabric and the macrame and shell rnkfr iff belt I made especially for the film. By JOAN CROSBY MALIBU CANYON, Calif. The setting is a lovely pastoral one with green rolling hillsides, wisps of smoke curling to the sky from a chimney in the stucco longhouse, lots of women at work at various jobs from weaving to blacksmi thing and a full gaggle cf --dtvJw'Ve stockade just waiting to be auctioned off. It is the Confederacy of Ruth, a matriarchal society in the 22nd century and it has sprung full-bloom from the fertile imagination of Gene Rodden-berry, the man who is a god to Star Trekians. is also the badkground for Planet Earth, a pilot (a completely revamped and recast except for Ted Cassidy version of last season's Genesis 11) for ABC-TV which will be telecast on the network on April 23.

Today the ladies of the confederacy, dressed in the super-imaginative and revealing costumes of William Theiss (who also did the costumes for Star Trek) are at the auction block bidding on Ted Cassidy end admiring the obvious charms of John Saxon, in the stockade awaiting has turn. They have been captured and will be sold as dinks, a word Roddenberry uses to describ the slaves. I dont know where it came from, but some words just sound right for what you want them to mean, he said. Unfortunately, the generally sunny sky has suddenly turned doudy and a light rain is fall Seniors Get Lower Rates For Play! Senior citizens are invited by North Bend High School Thespians to attend their spring production, Bull In A China Shop, at a special admission rate of 50 cents, Thursday through Saturday, April 25, 26 and 27, at 8 p.m. in the schools multipurpose room.

One of six little old ladies living across the street from Detective OFinn is murdered by the others in an effort to attract the detectives attention. In love with the detective, the ladies are disappointed to find their crime brings little notice, and so a second murder is arranged. Unfortunately for Detective OFinn as well as the ladies, reporter Jane Rogers tries to get into the action. The cast includes Jeff Cra-gun, as Detective OFinn, Kim Hannah as Hildegarde, Pam Ball as Birdie, and Alicia Salazar as Jane Rogers. Alice Carlson directs the play with the assistance of Mirleen Whalen.

Regular adult admission is student admission is 75 cents. Scout Report Roger Moore, presenting the press award, was obviously thinking of Marlon Brandos proxy at last years Oscars. He said, I keep thinking Ill announce the winner and Minna-haha will get up and refuse the award. I 8:45 a.m. The New Yon 5:00 a.m.

Sesame Street 10:00 a.m. Art Impressions 10:30 a.m. Inside Out 11:00 a.m. Pnde And Prejudice 11:15 a.m. Fnm Here To There 11:90 a.m.

Weaving 12:00 p.m. Come Together 12:90 p.m. Italic Calligraphy 1:00 p.m. The Eiectnc Company 1:90 p.m. Pnde and Prejudice 1:45 pjn.

Mulligan Stew 2:15 p.m. Ripples 230 p.m. The New You 2:45 p.m. Of AU Things! 900 p.m. Playing the Guitar 9:90 p.m.

Inside Out 4:00 p.m. Sesame Street 5:00 p.m. Misterogers Neighborhood 5:30 pm. The Electric Company 5:00 p.m. Childrens Literature 4.30 p.m.

Public Works 7:00 p.m. Feedback 7:30 p.m. French Chef 5:00 p.m. Washington Connection 590 p.m. Theatre In America 11:00 p.m.

Sign Off THURSDAY 50 a.m. Modern Supervision 5:30 a.m. Of All Things! 5:45 a.m. The New You 5:00 a.m. Sesame Street 10:00 a.m.

Let's Explore Science 10:30 p.m. Misterogers 10:45 a.m. Art Impressions 11 :00 a.m. Challenge 11:90 a.m. Captioned Programs 12:00 p.m.

Child Guidance 12:30 p.m. 360 Degrees 1:00 p.m. The Eiectnc Company 1:90 p.m. Reaching Out 1:45 p.m. Italic Calligraphy 2:15 p.m.

Its Happening 2:30 p.m. The New You 2:45 p.m. Of AU Things 3:00 p.m. Smoking Options 9:30 p.m. Library Programs 4:00 m.

Sesame Street 5:00 p.m. Misterogers Neigh borbeod 5:30 p.m. The Electric Company 4:00 p.m. Playing the Guitar 4:30 p.m. Library Programs 7:00 m.

Feedback 7:90 p.m. Book Beat 5 00 p.m. Behind The Lines 10:30 p.m. Lenex Quartet 11:00 p.m. Sign Off FRIDAY :00 a.m.

Captioned Programs cr AU Ttizzzi ajn. The New You 5.00 a.m. Sesame Street 10:00 a.m. Swedish Close-Up 10:30 a.m. The Changing City 11:00 an.

Mulligan Stew 1130 a.m. Capticned Programs p.m. Boating 1:00 p.m. The Electric Company 1 :30 p.m. From Here To There 1:45 p.m.

Form And Function 2:00 p.m. Inside Out 2:30 p.m. The New Yen 2 45 p.m. Of AU Things! 3.00 pai. Zoom 3:30 p.m.

Folk Guitar SUNDAY 4:60 p.m. Bill Mayers Journal 5 00 p.m. Tempo 5:90 p.m. Oregoa Week In Review 4:00 p.m. Wail Street Week 5:90 p.m.

Washington Week la Review 700 p.m. Zoom 7:90 p.m. Nova 5:90 p.m. Eye To Eye 5:00 p.m. Masterpiece Theatre 30:00 p.m.

Firing Use 21:00 p.m. Sign Off MONDAY 5:00 a.m. Captioned Programs 0:90 a.m. Of All Things 4:45 a.m. The New Yen 5:00 an.

Sesame Street 30:00 a.m. Ripples 10:15 a.m. Chance And Choice 10:40 a.m. Dollar Date 31:00 a.m. Beyond Prate and Prejudice 11:15 a.m.

It Happening 31:90 a.m. Public Works 12:00 p.m. Environment and Man 12:15 p.m. Carolines Corner 22:90 p.m. Mulligan Stew 1:00 p.m.

The Electric Company 190 p.m. Beyond Pnde and Prejudice 2:00 p.m. 960 Degrees 290 p.m. The New You 2.45 p.m. Of All Things 9:00 p.m.

Community Relations 9:90 p.m. Weaving 4:00 p.m. Sesame Street 5:00 p.m. Misterogers Neighborhood 5:90 p.m. The Electric Company 4:00 p.m.

Child Abuse 7:00 p.m. Generation 10 7:90 p.m. P.A. 4:00 p.m. Special si the Week 30:00 p.m.

In View 1090 pm. Being Black In Oregon 21:00 p.m. Sign Off TUESDAY 5:00 a.m. Psychology Introduction 5:30 a.m. Of All Things! 5:45 a.m.

The New You 5:00 a.m. Sesame Street 2000 a.m. Carrasco lend as 20:90 a.m. Inside Out 10:45 a.m. Challenge 11:00 a.m.

Form and Function 11:15 n.m. Swedish Close-Up 11:30 a.m. Captioned Programs 1200 p.m. Child Guidance 2290 p.m. Environment 4t Man 1:00 p.m.

The ElecUic Company 1:90 p.m. Chance and Choice 2:90 p.m. The New You 2:45 p.m. Of All Things! 9:00 p.m. Modern Supervision p.m.

Liorry rivtiu-404 p.m. Sesame Street 5:00 p.m. Misterogers neighborhood 5.96 p.m. The Electne Company 4:60 p.m. Community Relatione 4:90 p.m.

Library Programs p.m. Fsw-ack 7:90 p.m. Tempo 4:00 p.m Bill Moyers Journal 5:00 p.m. Black Journal 10:00 p.m. Devout Young 2030 p.m.

Inside Gut 11:00 p.m. Sign Off WEDNESDAY 4:00 n.m. Capboned Program 4:90 a.m. Of AU Things! If You Have A Consumer Complaint 1 Call or Write State of Oregon Consumer Protection Division 1133 S.W. Market Portland 97201 Phona 229-5522.

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About The World Archive

Pages Available:
850,691
Years Available:
1906-2020