39,775 research outputs found
Blood and Ice Playbill
Providence College Department of Theatre, Dance & Film
Blackfriars Theatre
Blood and Ice by Liz Lochead
October 20-22 & 27-29, 1989
Director, Mary G. Farrell
Scenic Design, Nancy Pontius
Lighting Design, Kathleen Giebler
Costume Design, David Costa-Cabral
Wig, Makeup & Creature Design, Joe Rossi
Cast: Kate Marks - Mary Shelly; Bob Pulick - Shelly; Anne Marie Higgins - Claire Clairmont; Brendan Byrnes - Lord Byron; Beth Drury - Elise; Pete Mayer - The Creaturehttps://digitalcommons.providence.edu/blood_pubs/1004/thumbnail.jp
Birth, death, and recreation: An archetypical interpretation of Mary Shelley\u27s waking vision
Mary Shelly, the author of Frankenstein (Shelley, 1831), experienced a waking vision, leading to the creation of Frankenstein. Using Jungian theory, the characters in Frankenstein can be understood as projections of Mary\u27s repressed feelings. These projections occurred because of Mary\u27s strong identification with the mother archetype, consisting of 1) the maternal element and 2) the Eros. Mary had a hypertrophy (exaggerated identification) of the maternal element and a strong identification with the Eros, due to the early death of her mother and the later deaths of her three children. These events combined to produce Mary\u27s unique personality development and her creation of Frankenstein
An Exploration of Costume Design For David Emerson Toney\u27s Frankenstein: Dawn of a Monster
This thesis details the Costume Design process for David Emerson Toney’s Frankenstein: Dawn of a Monster at Virginia Commonwealth University. Toney’s original adaptation interprets Mary Shelley’s genre-defying novel as biography, directly influenced by the tragic events of her young life. Costumes differentiate the two narratives, with Mary Shelly in gray scale, regency-inspired modern dress and the novel in period and color. This follows the design process from concept to production to execution
メアリ・シェリーの母親言説
The purpose of this study is to investigate Mary Shelly\u27s discourse on motherhood in relation toher first novel Frankenstein. Mary Shelly\u27s own connections to motherhood are complex. Her mother died when she was only an infant, and she never ceased to idealize and long for her lost mother. She had her unhappy relationship with her stepmother. Moreover, she suffered from grief over the death of her young children. Under such circumstances, Frankenstein expresses both the daughter\u27s longing for maternal nurturance and her fears of becoming a mothering woman herself. Reconsidering these issues, we will discuss reproductive health as basic human rights of women.The purpose of this study is to investigate Mary Shelly\u27s discourse on motherhood in relation toher first novel Frankenstein. Mary Shelly\u27s own connections to motherhood are complex. Her mother died when she was only an infant, and she never ceased to idealize and long for her lost mother. She had her unhappy relationship with her stepmother. Moreover, she suffered from grief over the death of her young children. Under such circumstances, Frankenstein expresses both the daughter\u27s longing for maternal nurturance and her fears of becoming a mothering woman herself. Reconsidering these issues, we will discuss reproductive health as basic human rights of women
Strippers, Liquor, and Clowns: 3 Experiments in Comedy Playbill
Providence College Department of Theatre, Dance & Film
Blackfriars Theatre
December 3-5, 1999
Friday and Saturday, 8pm
Strippers, Liquor, and Clowns: 3 Experiments in Comedy
Grownups, by Kimberly Davis Basso
Directed by Patricia Hughes \u2701
Cast: Nora Whalen - Chastity; Mary Margaret O\u27Hara - Dee Dee; Kaitlyn Gentile - Jane; Lauren Brown - Gina
The Bear, by Anton Chekhov
Directed by Jessica Tabak \u2701
Cast: Meridith Hernandez - Mrs. Popov; Joe BonFiglio - Zambuka; Matt Duchnowski - Smirnov; Nora Whalen and Mary Margaret O\u27Hara - Mrs. Popov\u27s Servants
Why Not Wally? written and directed by Brian McDermott \u2700
Cast: James Woodhouse - Wally Walbersson; Courtney Cullinan - Helen Walbersson; Vito Salm - Jim Walbersson; Sarah Fanning - Hilda/Shelly; Drew Royals - Hecklestein/ Murray Salzwater; Ryan Ainscough - Percy/ Sammy; Chris Deely - Newspaper Boy; Norm Knoerlein - Steven Cockshintzhttps://digitalcommons.providence.edu/experiments_comedy_1999_pubs/1013/thumbnail.jp
PC Dance Club Fall Semester Show Playbill
Providence College Department of Theatre, Dance & Film
PC Dance Club Fall Semester Show
November 22 & 23, 2015
Choreographers: Katrina Pavao, Aubrey Legasse, Elissa Stagliano, Christine Dragan, Ariel Cormier, Lea Knizek, Kristen Landry, Becca Snyder, Pauline DiAgostino, Maddie Boffi, Mikaila Christopher, Caitlin Conlon, Delia Egaan, Michelle Desjardins, Krista Sevigny
Dancers: Madeline Boffi, Mikaila Christopher, Caitlin Conlon, Ariel Cormier, Michelle Desjardins, Pauline DiAgostino, Christine Dragan, Delia Egan, Lea Knizek, Kristen Landry, Katrina Pavao, Krista Sevigny, Becca Snyder, Elissa Stagliano, Cheyenne Bennett, Kate Burnett, Ysabelle Errico, Kaitlyn Geraghty, Shelly Grasso, Aubrey Legasse, Joanna McDonough, Monica Morenz, Amanda Piechota, Alexa Spina, Molly Helms, Coleen Higgins, Emily Karazulas, Lea Knizek, Nicole Lizza, Jessica Tourville, Alison Urkiel, Anna Brown, Mikaila Christopher, Katie Cimini, Alexandra Fischbach, Ann Marie Hanabury, Leigh Heinemann, Tori Long, Deirdre Moody, Cassie Pelli, Rosie Turner, Gaby DeParis, Kenji Fujita, Mike Gilmor, Tom Lyver, Chris Matthews, Nick Tavares, Lauren Berolini, Brooke Easton, Abigail Mattern, Elena Morganelli, Kate O\u27Connell, Mairead Roche, Caitlin Scuderi, Victoria Cicinelli, Pauline DiAgostino, Monica Gorton, Jacqueline Michels, Elena Morganelli, Cassie Pelli, Julia Shaw, Cheyenne Bennett, Anna Brown, Katie Cimini, Ysabelle Errico, Leigh Heinemann, Emily Karazulas, Ashley Maitland, Monica Morenz, Gabby Reimer, Kylah Simeone, Jessica Tourville, Brianna Abbott, Katie Flanagan, Melissa Grasso, Molly Helms, Megan Johnson, Kelly MacKay, Alissa Whitten, Lindsay Brestovansky, Mikaila Christopher, Kara Korslund, True Bui Ngo Thanh, McKenzie Marsh, Joanna McDonough, Elena Morganelli, Renee Ouellette, Mary Smith, Courtney Altenburger, Amy Gilligan, Tori Long, Kate O\u27Connell, Brittany Price, Shelly Grasso, Kara Korslund, McKenzie Marsh, Mary Smith, Esther Ssozihttps://digitalcommons.providence.edu/promos_2010s_pubs/1072/thumbnail.jp
Service Learning: Connecting Citizenship with the Classroom
Has the effective teaching of writing changed for the better, remained much the same, or become worse in the last 20 years? Have the major obstacles to the effective teaching of writing been removed? This 20- year follow-up examines the question
Inclusion is an action word
Published versionSupporting documentatio
Addressing Health Disparities in Middle School Students’ Nutrition and Exercise
Those with low income, especially women of African American and Hispanic heritage have the greatest risk of inactivity and obesity. A 4-session (Internet and video) intervention with healthy snack and gym labs was tested in 2 (gym lab in 1) urban low–middle-income middle schools to improve low fat diet and moderate and vigorous physical activity.1 The gym lab was particularly beneficial (p = .002). Fat in diet decreased with each Internet session in which students participated. Percentage of fat in food was reduced significantly p = .018 for Black, White, and Black/Native American girls in the intervention group. Interventions delivered through Internet and video may enable reduction of health disparities in students by encouraging those most at risk to consume 30% or less calories from fat and to engage in moderate and vigorous physical activity
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