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Author | Thomas, William Joseph | |
Date Accessioned | 2019-08-29T19:25:56Z | |
Date Available | 2019-08-29T19:25:56Z | |
Date of Issue | 2019-08 | |
Identifier (URI) | http://hdl.handle.net/10342/7496 | |
Description | Summertime is high season for outdoor dramas, and North Carolina has a rich history of them. Many NC natives have at-tended a production of “The Lost Colony” in Manteo or “Unto These Hills” in Cherokee. Other outdoor dramas in our state include “Strike at the Wind,” in Pembroke; “Horn in the West,” in Boone; “Tom Dooley: A Wilkes County Legend,” in Wil-kesboro; “First for Freedom,” in Halifax; and “From this Day Forward,” in Valdese. Shakespeare has his place in North Carolina too, from Ashe-ville’s Montford Park Players to Wilm-ington’s Cape Fear Shakespeare. | en_US |
Language | en_US | en_US |
Related URI | http://www.ncl.ecu.edu/index.php/NCL/article/viewFile/5369/4935 | en_US |
Subject | Outdoor Theatre | en_US |
Subject | North Carolina | en_US |
Subject | Joyner Library, East Carolina University | en_US |
Subject | Outdoor Drama | en_US |
Title | From “The Lost Colony” to “Unto These Hills”: Outdoor Theatre in North Carolina | en_US |
Type | Article | en_US |
Journal Name | North Carolina Libraries | en_US |
Journal Volume | 77 | en_US |
Journal Issue | 1 | en_US |
Article Pages | 59-61 | en_US |