Title
Displaying results 1 - 14 of 14
Author: Marsh, John
Institution: Edinboro State College
Author: Heggestad, Charles
Institution: National Endowment for the Humanities
1978
Author: Marsh, John
Author: Nordberg, Karl
Author: Marsh, John
Institution: Borough of Edinboro
1979
Abstract
A letter from John Marsh to the Syracuse Alumni Association for publication about alumni.
Author: Marsh, John
Institution: Edinboro State College
1979
Author: Marsh, John
Institution: Edinboro State College
1979
Abstract
This letter was written to John Marsh and Karl Nordberg after Mark Davis attended an exhibition that was put together about Lawrence (Lorenz) Vincent Kupper. Mark included some historical information about Kupper along with two photos.
Author: Davis, Mark A.
1991
Author: Shadle, Pat
Institution: National Endowment for the Humanities
1978
Subtitle
Applications Instructions Planning Grants
Institution: National Endowment for the Humanities
1977
Subtitle
The story of theatre in Northwestern Pennsylvania
Abstract
"A Fabulous Era" involves the production of three half-hour radio programs--"Frank Coitman, trouper from Tidioute," "Michael V. Ball, passionate playgoer in Warren," and "T.H. Lloyd, manager of St. Petersburg's opera house"-- in a projected series of fifteen programs.
Most evidently our bias is regional, but it is our thesis that the story of theatre in Pennsylvania's Oil Region is substantively the story of the great American road,1875-1915. To make our point we examine the local opera house as a national Institution even as we consider its manager, audiences, and those attractions, appearing for One Night Only!, that reflected the prejudices, predilections, and preconceptions of Americans at large in the period under consideration.
Most evidently our bias is regional, but it is our thesis that the story of theatre in Pennsylvania's Oil Region is substantively the story of the great American road,1875-1915. To make our point we examine the local opera house as a national Institution even as we consider its manager, audiences, and those attractions, appearing for One Night Only!, that reflected the prejudices, predilections, and preconceptions of Americans at large in the period under consideration.
Author: Marsh, John