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PAGE 6—The Georgia Bulletin, August 15, 1974
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BULLETIN REVIEW:
Albee’s ‘Everything in the Garden’
Pleasing to Druid Cellar Audience
BY MICHAEL MOTES
With Edward Albee’s “Everything in the Garden,” the Druid Cellar Theatre in
Toco Hills Shopping Center harvests a good crop of laughs under the able direction
of Stuart Culpepper.
Albee based his 1967 work on an earlier English playwright’s fictional account of
press reports of an international scandal involving a group of fashionable suburban
housewives who were discovered to be supplementing the family income not by
Avon route, but by afternoons spent in the local bordello.
MH
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© SI ‘if IS @ gs s © ©
EAST MARIETTA SHOPPING CENTER
1474 ROSWELL ROAD - MARIETTA
424-0223
B/S/R DUAL MCDONALD CRAIG DOKORDER KENWOOD TEAC
Jenny (Laura Whyte) and
Richard (Terry Beaver) are
caught in the tangles of
suburbia with just enough
money to make the mortgage
payment, send their son to
boarding school and maintain
the necessary club
membership.
But the little luxuries of
life are beyond their means.
Jenny longs for a green house
for her highly prized garden
and Richard yens for a power
mower.
The logical answer to their
financial bind is for Jenny to
seek employment, but
Richard will not hear of his
wife working. With the
appearance of Mrs. Toothe
(Ellen Heard), who was sent
to Jenny by a “mutual
friend,” the pot of gold at the
end of the tightly budgeted
rainbow becomes a reality to
the housewife through
moonlighting in Mrs.
Toothe’s highly respectable
social club.
Bursting with just a little
too much enthusiasm at the
opening, Beaver settles
comfortably and convincingly
into the role of the harried
husband. His explosion when
he discovers Jenny’s secret
comes off nicely.
Ellen Heard provides the
audience with a smooth and
highly comical madame and is
one of the show’s most
entertaining characters.
Brimming over with the
joie de vivre of the idle rich,
Lewis Fox offers a fine
performance as • neighbor
Jack, whom Albee uses to
address the audience in a
chatty matter unheard by the
others on stage.
It is Jack’s recognition of
Mrs. Toothe that brings the
AUGUST 19
production to its surprise
finale, in which Albee makes
his point that we are all
prostitutes for some sort of
material gain.
Cocktails are served at the
Druid Cellar beginning at 6
p.m. with the dinner buffet
opening at 7. Curtain is 8:30
p.m. Monday through
Saturday.
A group of former St. Pius
students are part of the
troupe offering an after-hours
mini production of
Aristophanes’ “The Birds”
following the Albee comedy.
At Random
“AS YOU LIKE IT” will
take on a new look when the
all-male cast of the National
Theater of Great Britain
moves into the Civic Center
for an August 20 through
August 25 run.
The Barn Dinner Theater
in Marietta continues the
musical comedy “Once Upon
a Mattress.”
Theater Helen in the
Alpine village of Helen,
Georgia, is offering “The
Sound of Music” through
September 1. Curtain is 8
p.m. nightly except Monday
with Saturday and Sunday
matinees at 2:30 p.m.
Reservations may be obtained
by calling 404-878-2426.
Auditions for membership
in the Atlanta Symphony
Choruses for the 1974-75
season have been announced
by Music Director Robert
Shaw and will take place by
appointment during the week
of September 2 at the Atlanta
Memorial Arts Center.
Singers are asked to
perform a prepared art song,
operatic aria or other solo
material, to sight read a short
selection and perform scales.
Audition appointments may
be made by calling the
Atlanta Symphony Offices,
829-3600, extension 211.
Cathedral Concert Set
Works by Tournemire, Handel, Buxtehude, Langlais,
Dupre and William Mathias will he offered by organist
Raymond H. Chenault at the Cathedral of Christ the
King on Monday, August 19, at 8:15 p.m.
Chenault, who has
concertized extensively
throughout the eastern part
of the United States and in
Belgium, is scheduled to
receive a Master’s Degree in
Organ Performance from the
College Conservatory of
Music of the University of
Cincinnati later this month.
While serving as organist
and choirmaster at St. James
Episcoplan Church in
Richmond, Virginia, Chenault
conducted the New Wine
Singers, a group of teen-age
vocalist whose tours included
a performance at St. Anne’s
Episcopal Church in Atlanta.
The Cathedral organ recital
is open to all those in the
archdiocese.
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FORMER ST. PIUS STUDENTS made up the cast
of Aristophanes’ “The Birds’ in an afterhours mini
production staged by Steve Seyfried this summer for
the Druid Cellar Bam Theater at Toco Hills. Pictured
(left to right) are seated, Gerald Craig and Dean
Carothers; Standing, Dan Anderson, Steve Seyfried,
Mike O’Shea, Steve Hedges, and Elise Cunningham.
Edward Albee’s “Everything in the Garden” is
currently running at the dinner theatre.
SEVERAL CATHOLIC
YOUNGSTERS were among those
attending a week-long retreat for the
Atlanta Boy Choir held at the Baptist
Assembly in Toccoa. In addition to
rehearsing for the upcoming musical
season, the boys found time for
activities ranging from swimming to
jewel mining. Among Catholics
attending were Jim Berry, Bill Grabbe,
Stephen Krick and Barrett and Bryan
Morton. Flectcher Wolfe is director of
the choir. Membership is by audition.
Additional information may be
obtained by calling 892-1908.
Our concern is for the presence of a priest.
But the world’s poor do not often have the
blessing of priestly service at their hour.
■
They could — if you would HELP GIVE
THEM A PRIEST OF THEIR OWN.
Today 49,400 young men look to you for the
financial aid they need to attend a mission
seminary so they can serve their people as priests.
WHAT GREATER GIFT COULD YOU
GIVE TO OTHERS NOW... AND AT
THE HOUR OF DEATH?
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Leon V. Kofod.
As a sign of my love and concern I enclose my gift for the training and support
of native seminarians:
□ $1,500 complete seminary education
□ $750 for three years of study
□ $250 provides a full year of study
□ $100 towards room and board
$ —
□ $50 towards vestments
□ $25 for books and other school aids
□ $10 for study needs
□ $5 for necessary personal needs
.other, to be used where most needed
GB 8-15-74
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Please make checks payable to:
THE SOCIETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE FAITH
_ ™
Salvation and Service are the work of
v
The Society for the Propagation of the Faith
Send your gift to:
Most Rev. Edward T. O’Meara
National Director
Dept. C, 366 Fifth Avenue
New York, New York 10001
Rev. Vincent Mulvin
Catholic Center
756 West Peachtree St. N.W.
Atlanta, Georgia 30308