Box 7
Contains 133 Results:
Program, 2006 February 23
Scope and Contents Program for "Dreadful Sorry, Guys" at Rivier College Center for Peace and Social Justice, Nashua, New Hampshire.
Script, 2006 February
Scope and Contents Script for introductory remarks by Susan Feiner, presenting Claudia Stevens' and "Dreadful Sorry, Guys" at The University of Southern Maine. Feiner recalls that she had seen Stevens perform a show about Franz Kafka at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, VA circa 1993.
Article, 2007 February 1
Scope and Contents Article in The Phoenix previewing "Dreadful Sorry, Guys" performance by Claudia Stevens set for February 4, 2007, at Swarthmore College, written by Lena Wong.
Online article, 2007 February 1
Printout of news article by Lena Wong in Swarthmore College's online version of The Phoenix.
Program flyer, 2007 February 5
Scope and Contents Flyer for "Dreadful Sorry, Guys" at Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania.
Review, 2006 March 2
Online review by Ellen Grafton in the Arts section of The Middlebury Campus news weekly for Middlebury College.
Color Flyer, 2007 Fall
Scope and Contents Color flyer that includes an announcement for an October 5 performance of "Dreadful Sorry, Guys" at The Sarah Isom Center for Women and Gender Studies located at the University of Mississippi.
Program, 2007 October 5
Scope and Contents Program for "Dreadful Sorry, Guys" at the University of Mississippi.
Flyer, 2007 October 19
Scope and Contents Color flyer for "Dreadful Sorry, Guys" at Austin College.
Flyer, 2007 October 19
Scope and Contents Yellow flyer for "Dreadful Sorry, Guys" at Austin College.
E-mail printout
Correspondence with Andrei Codrescu regarding Exquisite Corpse publication agreement.
E-mail printout
Personal correspondence from Ellis Cose regarding his response to reading the monologue.
Webzine printout, 2003 Winter
Index for Cyber Issue 13 (printed December 21, 2008) from Exquisite Corpse webzine (http://www.corpse.org/archives/issue_12/stage_screen/stevens.html.
Script printout, 2003 Winter
Scope and Contents Script for "The Poisoner on the Train" by Claudia Stevens, published in Cyber Issue 13 (printed December 21, 2008) from Exquisite Corpse webzine, (http://www.corpse.org/archives/issue_12/stage_screen/stevens.html).
Annotated libretto and musical score, 2002-2003
Claudia Stevens' annotated copy of the publication of the libretto and music for The Beggar's Opera by John Gay (New York: Dover, 1973).
Personal copy of a book, 2002-2003
Brecht, Bertolt. (1960). The Threepenny Opera. New York: Grove Press. This is Claudia Stevens' personal copy of this book used for her creation of "The Poisoner on the Train," with her literary notes and musical interpolations inserted.
Photocopied music with notes, 2002-2003
Photocopies of music excerpted from a publication of music for The Threepenny Opera, including "Nr. 6 SeerauberJenny (Polly)," "Nr. 18. Salomonsong (Jenny)," and "Nr. 13. Zuhalterballade (Jenny-Macheath)
Handwritten notes, 2002-2003
Notes on ruled yellow paper and one photocopied page of Bible verses from Exodus 20.
Performance Script, 2002 June
Scope and Contents Script for "The Poisoner on the Train" used in performance, with handwritten notes.
Performance script, 2002 August
Scope and Contents Script for "The Poisoner on the Train" used in performance, with handwritten notes.
Performance script, 2004 August
Scope and Contents Script for "The Poisoner on the Train" used in performance, with handwritten notes.
Performance script, 2005 June
Scope and Contents Revised script for "The Poisoner on the Train" used in performance, with handwritten notes.
Musical sketches, 2002-2005
Musical sketches related to "The Poisoner on the Train."
Online notices, 2004 January 26
Online announcement on the Hampden-Sydney College Website for the first unstaged reading of the monologue, "The Poisoner on the Train." A notice that folloed the presentation includes photographs from the event.
Review, 2004 August 24
Scope and Contents Article announcing the September 9 "world debut" of "The Poisoner on the Train" at Theatre Project in Baltimore, Maryland, copied from The Sun, August 29, 2004.