THURSDAY. JULY 19. '1962 Nip*Or . .s* - cmet . . Thurber _ Takks ;Olt bipalt . ON _ THE WALL, who is the best acting apprentice of them all. might' be the thought of Bob Valanty as he applies his makeup before going •on stage. Valanty, a recent Penn State graduate. plays several roles including the wolf in the fable. "The Wolf at the Door." BEFORE EACH WEEK'S PRODUCTION the sets are built and assembled in TAPS, the converted Nitlany Dining Hall. Joan Skew, a* itinnt to the designer. paints while Ronald Dobkin,. an acting apprentice, works on one of the panels. RADIO ANTENNAS?—No. _ are wire frames bent to characters. Dancer Anita Goshko 'is having her wire caricature painted by dancer Gene Maisie. whose wire frame is in turn being painted by Jos Bella. manager of costumes and properties. These ballet-set characters dance between scenes under ultraviolet lamp so that the audience sees only the glowing wire kames. SUMMER COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARC PENNSYLVANIA MAX FISCHER is the director of the musical review. Earlier in the season he played the load role in." The 49th Cousin." • 'Carnival' Marks Musical First Imaginative staging and ver tatile actors brought vitality to James Thurber's "A Thurber Car nival", at- its Mateer Playhouse opening Tuesday night. NINE MEMBERS of Mateer's regular company appeared in a series of scenes based on Thur ber short stories and fables on such subjects as invisible uni corns, a drunken Grant at Appo matox, gentlemen shoppers and pet doctors. Featured also was Thurber's tale of "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty." The show opened and closed with high-keyed word dances which were carried off with lively and well-timed performances. The major problem in these scenes was that Lydia Bruce could not regulate her voice. She Colloglan Photos By TOM BROWN! By JOAN MEHAN and KAY MILLS Collegian Reviewers LAST MINUTE changos in sat layout and design are discussed by Ed Anderson. stags manager, and Bill Allison. set designer. seemed to be screaming at the wearing black tights and fluores audience. I cent wire masks. Particuiarl!, in- The customary professional triguing was the dancing of Anita polish was lacking in severallGoshko while male partners Frank scenes as line problems and pre-iKaufrnan, Gene Mantle and James Martfel did the heavy scene shift mature entrances marred thisl initial performance. The sequencesil% L on Macbeth and the island visitor! uavid Frank and - Max Gulack failed to draw the laughter theiwerili the cast's- most consistency lines warranted due to these dit-lamusing members. Lean B. Ste ficulties plus the need for faster l yens made it a tipsy trio when. tempo. overcoming line lapses in earlier sequences, he joined Frank and KISS BRUCE also contributed Gulick in a gay romp about hus to ;the Macbeth fiasco but re- bands on a shopping spree. Esther deemed herself ably later as the Benson as the salesgirl gave the wife who would not cooperate in scene art extra touch of humor. plans for .her burial. Kay Frey in her second Mateer Connecting the Thurberesque performance added lite and girlish vignettes into a unified musical beauty to the production. Miss revue was the Jean-Ann Trio, Frey also displayed an ability`for which displayed the essentiallhumorofis facial expreslion. sense of rhythm and coordination' THIS CARNIVAL. of laughs, of ,found with action onstage. (directed by Max Fischer, marks EVen set changes were a de-!an entertaining and enterpris‘ng light as four stage hands became,"first" for Mateer in the field of animated Thurber drawings by'musical revue. LITTLE GIRL IS STOPPED BY A WOLF while going tosses grarsdnunhsa's house in the scene. "The Little Gisl end The Wolf." The 11111 e girl is played by Kay Frey and the wolf by Leon B. Stevens. PAGE' FIVE