Harlequin Players

The Lesson

The third production of the 1966 regular season consisted of a triple bill of one-act plays. The Harlequin company divided itself that week into three teams, with each show having its own cast, crew, and staff. The shows were as diverse as could be imagined: Eugene Ionesco's absurdist The Lesson; William Saroyan's morality play Hello Out There; and George Bernard Shaw's melodramatic farce Passion, Poison and Petrifaction. The Ionesco and Shaw plays were the first Harlequin shows to be directed by staff members other than Tony Vintcent (costume designer Judy Slattum and technical director Edwin Neal, respectively); the Saroyan play was directed by Vintcent, aided by several student assistants being exposed to the challenges of directing.
 

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St. Mark's School of Texas

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Dallas, Texas 75230
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St. Mark’s School of Texas is a private, nonsectarian college-preparatory boys’ day school for students in grades 1 through 12, located in Dallas, Texas. St. Mark’s aims to prepare young men to assume leadership and responsibility in a competitive and changing world.

St. Mark’s does not discriminate in the administration of its admission and education policies on the basis of race, color, religion, sexual orientation, or national or ethnic origin.