Two actors in the March 1959 Follies production of Katy Did, which is a modern adaptation of Oliver Goldsmith's She Stoops to Conquer.
Left to Right: Elizabeth Graham ; Harry B. Danner
Two actors in the March 1959 Follies production of Katy Did, which is a modern adaptation of Oliver Goldsmith's She Stoops to Conquer.
Left to Right: Elizabeth Graham ; Harry B. Danner
The Follies transport the audience to ancient Egypt in one of their earliest productions, "The Sphinx Winks." Students wrote this original musical comedy, which revolves around the hopeless love triangle of Caesar, Cleopatra, and Mark Anthony.
The Follies transport the audience to ancient Egypt in one of their earliest productions, "The Sphinx Winks." Students wrote this original musical comedy, which revolves around the hopeless love triangle of Caesar, Cleopatra, and Mark Anthony.
The Follies transport the audience to ancient Egypt in one of their earliest productions, "The Sphinx Winks." Students wrote this original musical comedy, which revolves around the hopeless love triangle of Caesar, Cleopatra, and Mark Anthony.
The Follies transport the audience to ancient Egypt in one of their earliest productions, "The Sphinx Winks." Students wrote this original musical comedy, which revolves around the hopeless love triangle of Caesar, Cleopatra, and Mark Anthony.
The Follies transport the audience to ancient Egypt in one of their earliest productions, "The Sphinx Winks." Students wrote this original musical comedy, which revolves around the hopeless love triangle of Caesar, Cleopatra, and Mark Anthony.
For their 1982 fall production, the Follies perform the jazzy dark comedy, Three Penny Opera.
For their 1982 fall production, the Follies perform the jazzy dark comedy, Three Penny Opera.
For their 1982 fall production, the Follies perform the jazzy dark comedy, Three Penny Opera.
For their 1982 fall production, the Follies perform the jazzy dark comedy, Three Penny Opera.
For their 1982 fall production, the Follies perform the jazzy dark comedy, Three Penny Opera.
The Sharks and the Jets get ready for a showdown in the Follies' production of West Side Story in 1984.
The 1964 Follies production Where Do We Go from Here parodies the Jules Pfeiffer play in a satire about life at Dickinson.