. THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, JULY 28 1954 . THE MICIHGAN DAILY WEflNF~nAY. iTTL'V ~R ThU ua .lLUll.7 l4.j 17 lJ lI .l., NV All'1. s+a x YI SHERIDAN'S REHEARSAL FARCE: 'U' Speech Department To Present 'The Critic' I B. Iden Payne, guest director in the Department of Speech this summer, will portray his famous role of Mr. Puff in the University production of Richard Brinsley Sheridan's rehearsal farce. "The Critic, which will open at 8 p.m. tonight, and run through Saturday at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre in the League. The well-known actor-director will be playing a character he has portrayed many times since he first created the Mr. Puff role in 1915 in New York. This will not be the first University production of "The Critic." for it was staged on both the spring and summer playbills of 1940. As it is now, it was then directed by William P.'Halstead, professor of speech. Cast of 50 A cast of over 50 students, faculty and Ann Arbor townspeople will participate in the hilarious "play-within-the-play," which is a satire of Elizabethan tragedy. It is climaxed by an exaggerated "Masque of the Rivers," for which the choreography was done by Esther E. Pease, associate supervisor of the Women's Physican Education De- partment. Scenery for the production, which includes an elaborate staging of a naval battle and the sinking of the Spanish Armada, as set in 1588, has been designed by Jack E. Bender, speech instructor. Model warships will be carried across the stage by actors concealed behind sea walls. The ships will fire cannons which will be accompanied by flashes of flame and billows of smoke. True to historical fact, the Spanish vessels will be larger than their English enemies, and realism of battle will be carried out even to the breaking and falling masts on the warships' decks. Change of Scenery Concerning the scenery in general, Bender commented that the first act will represent 18th Century Georgian type, while the second and third acts will use the Elizabethan settings. Costumes and props have been under the direction of Phyllis Pletener of the speech department, while the business manager for Play Productions is Bruce Nary. The 18th Century theatre orchestra with "real-live musicians" will be conducted by Paul Miller,' a graduate of the University. Members of the 50-man cast include: Sue Spurrier, William Teufel, Cynthia Hepburn, Carol Loveless, Donald Shanover, Paul Rebillot, William McAnallen, Lloyd Evans, Raymond Bahor, John Olson, Vic- tor Hughes, Michael Gregoric, Kendall Cox, Harold Radford, Shirley Pengilly, Gwen Arner, Patrick Smith and Joann Ragni. Others are: Alexander Young, Thomas Arp, Russell Aiuto, Nafe Katter, Frances Gudeman, Dorothy Davis, Janet Stolarevsky, Beverly Blancett, Sylvia Rudolph, Mary Lou Moench, Betty Ellis, Carlaine Balduf, Gertrude Slack and Genevieve Byar. r " 'I "' f B. IDEN PAYNE AS MR. PUFF, AND DONALD SHANOVER AS MR. SNEER, ARE DOING A SCENE FROM RICHARD BRINSLEY SHERIDAN'S "THE CRITIC" WHICH WILL START AT 8 P.M. TONIGHT AT THE LYDIA MENDELSSOHN TIE- ATRE IN THE LEAGUE. DAILY PHOTO FEATURE Pictures by DUAN E POOLE Story by SUE GARF I ELD 4 A w , THE CHEESECAKE SMILE IS COMING FROM SUE SPUR- RIER, WHO PLAYS BRITANNIA AND ALSO DOES THE PRO- LOGUE IN THE SPEECH DEPARTMENT PRODUCTION, THE THIRD IN THE SERIES. CREW MEN ARE PUSHING THE "CHARIOT" ACROSS STAGE. "THE SCARF DANCE" IS BEING EXECUTED BY MEMBERS OF THE DANCING CHORUS, WHICH WILL APPEAR IN "THE CRITIC" AND "THE MARRIAGE OF FIGARO." THE CHORUS IS DIRECTED BY ESTHER PEASE OF THE WOMEN'S PHYS- ICAL EDUCTION DEPARTMENT. 1 DONALD SHANOVER AS MR. SNEER, PAUL REBILLOT AS SIR FRETFUL PLAGIARY AND WILLIAM TEUFEL AS MR. DANGLE PORTRAY A SCENE FROM THE REHEARSAL FARCE, "THE CRITIC," PLAYING TONIGHT THROUGH SATURDAY. 4 Y 'A 9 r..