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2012-2013 Season

Wrinkle's Journey Through Time

by Patrick Hayes, Dramaturg

Like most of Madeleine L’Engle’s works, A Wrinkle in Time depicts time travel and dimension hopping. In particular, Wrinkle covers a time period between the years 1950 – 1969. Most of the important historical events during this time period had direct correlation in her writing, represented by events in the narrative and the fictional science used within the book series. Listed below are some of the major events occurring during that twenty-year period.

1950

  • First Organ Transplant
First_Peanuts_comic

  • First “Peanuts” Cartoon Strip
  • Korean War Begins
  • Senator Joseph McCarthy Begins Communist Witch Hunt

1951

  • Color TV Introduced
  • Truman Signs Peace Treaty With Japan, Officially Ending WWII
  • Winston Churchill Again Prime Minister of Great Britain

1952

  • Car Seat Belts Introduced
elizabeth

1953

  • DNA Discovered
  • Hillary and Norgay Climb Mt. Everest
  • Joseph Stalin Dies

1954

  • First Atomic Submarine Launched
  • Report Says Cigarettes Cause Cancer
  • Roger Bannister Breaks the Four-Minute Mile
  • Segregation Ruled Illegal in U.S.

1955

  • Disneyland Opens
disney

  • James Dean Dies in Car Accident
  • McDonald’s Corporation Founded
  • Rosa Parks Refuses to Give Up Her Seat on a Bus
  • Warsaw Pact Signed

1956

1957

  • Dr. Seuss Publishes The Cat in the Hat
  • Soviet Satellite Sputnik Launches Space Age

1958

  • Hula Hoops Become Popular
  • LEGO Toy Bricks First Introduced
  • NASA Founded
  • Peace Symbol Created

1959

  • Castro Becomes Dictator of Cuba
  • The Sound of Music Opens on Broadway

1960

  • Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho Released
  • First Televised Presidential Debates
  • Lasers Invented
  • Walsh and Piccard Become the First to Explore the Deepest Place on Earth

1961

  • Bay of Pigs Invasion

1961

  • Bay of Pigs Invasion
berlinwall

  • Berlin Wall Built
  • JFK Gives “Man on the Moon” Speech
  • Peace Corps Founded
  • Soviets Launch First Man in Space
  • Tsar Bomba, the Largest Nuclear Weapon to Ever Be Exploded

1962

  • Andy Warhol Exhibits His Campbell’s Soup Can
  • Cuban Missile Crisis
  • First James Bond Movie
  • Johnny Carson Takes Over the Tonight Show
  • Marilyn Monroe Found Dead

1963

  • 16th Street Baptist Church Bombing
  • Betty Friedan Publishes The Feminine Mystique
  • First Dr. Who Episode Airs
  • First Woman in Space
  • JFK Assassinated
  • March on Washington
  • Martin Luther King Jr. Makes His “I Have a Dream” Speech

1964

  • Beatles Become Popular in U.S.
  • Cassius Clay (a.k.a. Muhammad Ali) Becomes World Heavyweight Champion
  • Civil Rights Act Passes in U.S.
  • Hasbro Launches GI Joe Action Figure
  • Nelson Mandela Sentenced to Life in Prison

1965

  • Los Angeles Riots

1965

  • Los Angeles Riots
vietnam

  • Malcolm X Assassinated
  • Miniskirt First Appears
  • New York City Great Blackout
  • The Rolling Stones’ Mega Hit Song, “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction”
  • U.S. Sends Troops to Vietnam

1966

  • Black Panther Party Established
  • Mao Zedong Launches the Cultural Revolution
  • Mass Draft Protests in U.S.
  • National Organization for Women (NOW) Founded
  • Two Multi-Ton Chunks of the Mundrabilla Meteorite Found

1967

  • First Heart Transplant
  • Six-Day War in the Middle East
  • Three U.S. Astronauts Killed During Simulated Launch

1968

  • Martin Luther King Jr. Assassinated
  • My Lai Massacre
  • Nerve Gas Leak in Utah Kills 6,000 Sheep
  • Robert F. Kennedy Assassinated
  • Tet Offensive

1969

  • ARPANET, the Precursor of the Internet, Created
  • Neil Armstrong Becomes the First Man on the Moon
  • Rock-and-Roll Concert at Woodstock
  • Sesame Street First Airs
  • manonmoon

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Simple is Best

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Simple is Best [caption id="" align="aligncenter" width="640"] Indeed.[/caption] by Adam White, dramaturg I write this blog post on the day of final dress rehearsal, on the eve of opening night! Everyone involved in this production of A Man for All Seasons has done marvelous work; the set and costuming and make up are all beautiful, and the cast is eager to put their performance in front of a live audience. I guess one could wonder if a dramaturg would give anything but a glowing report of their play that's about to go up, but quite truthfully: I'm eager for you to see this play! On the subject of wanting you to see our production of A Man For All Seasons, I want to relay to you an interesting experience I had just two day ago. Every BYUarts theatre production gets a promotional video, and I was asked by the video makers in charge of the promotional video to be interviewed for the piece on A Man for All Seasons. I accepted, and when I was in the interview, they had two questions for me: 1.) What is A Man for All Seasons about? 2.) Why should people go see A Man for All Seasons? As a dramaturg, I had a great answer for number one. Summarizing the events of this play in an interesting way was no problem. But that second question? That question gave me the hardest time! In the interview moment I was so flustered by my lack of an a concise answer. I quickly babbled out some gibberish to the camera man, after which I apologized and told him if he needed something more intelligible he shouldn't hesitate to call me back. Needless to say I was pretty embarrassed after the experience. Here's the thing: I'm the dramaturgy for this show. I should have some insight as to why people should go see this play (and I do). As I've thought about this experience and about my work as a dramaturg, I've come to the realize that in this situation what I needed was simplicity. Simple is best. See, during that brief interview with the promotional video guys, I was trying to make up a reason for people to see this show that sounded meaningful, or at least scholarly. That wasn't the right attitude for me at all because it meant that I was reaching beyond the play, maybe for selfish reasons, to lend what I deemed to be credibility to a piece of art that, maybe, doesn't need to be legitimized at all. I was being long-winded and downright silly. What the play really needed was for me to speak its simple 'truth.' To redeem myself a little bit and to put my new motto for dramaturgy into practice, I will tell you why I think people should see A Man for All Seasons. I firmly believe, in the words of Oscar Wilde, that "Life imitates art far more than art imitates Life." This play, this conflict between Thomas More, his family, and King Henry VIII, informs our understanding of what it means to have a conscience. Bolt challenges us to explore what it means to have an integrity and what having integrity means in our most intimate relationships. Also revealed in this play is the corrupting influence of political power. I think that every person grapples with these themes, experiences, and issues.A Man for All Seasons is an important play for people to see. The promotional video guys didn't end up using my interview for the promotional video. Frankly, I feel so relieved; it was awful. May you forego the trappings of intelligent-sounding language the next time you are in an interview. Enjoy the show!
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