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Princeton Triangle Club

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The Princeton Triangle Club is a theater troupe at Princeton University . Founded in 1891, it is one of the oldest collegiate theater troupes in the United States . Triangle premieres an original student-written musical every year, and then takes that show on a national tour. The club is known for its signature kickline ; historically performed by the men of the ensemble in drag , the kickline has recently been performed by a co-ed cast.

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78-630: The troupe presents several shows throughout the year, beginning in September with the "Frosh Week Show." In the autumn it premieres the year's new Triangle Show, an original student-written musical comedy, professionally directed and choreographed and performed in McCarter Theatre ; this Triangle Show goes on a national tour in January. In spring, the Club showcases the new writers' material in

156-464: A chaplain in the Union Army . He died in 1862 of one of the fevers prevalent in the camps. After his death, his widow, then a very young woman with a son one year old, was faced with serious financial problems. Elizabeth Grier was a native of Peoria, from a large family with partial German ancestry. She later was one of the pioneers in the movement for woman's suffrage . Obtaining a position in

234-456: A 25-year tradition of smaller fall productions to complement the full-scale, original spring shows. The fall productions of 1978, Happily Ever After , and 1979, String of Pearls , were both written by undergraduates. For the 1981 spring show, Triangle writers returned to the very roots of the club and based their book musical, Bold Type , on Booth Tarkington's novel, A Gentleman from Indiana . The 1981 tour again returned to California, but with

312-547: A brief period previously. His next charge was at the Falling Spring Presbyterian Church at Chambersburg, Pennsylvania , where he remained four years. A throat ailment forced him to give up preaching and he went to his alma mater as an instructor in logic in 1891. He received a Ph.D. degree in 1893 with a dissertation on "The Relation of Ethics to Jurisprudence ," became assistant professor in 1894, and Stuart Professor of Logic in 1907. Hibben

390-582: A handful of Triangle's original productions. Student apathy toward extracurricular activities began to affect Triangle toward the end of the 1950s. At a meeting in October 1958, the Board noted a very small turnout for the previous month's auditions. It was decided that more on-campus publicity would help, and as part of this effort Triangle Junior was formed, a group of seven club members who performed favorite Triangle songs at various receptions and functions. Over

468-597: A mass audience walk-out at the Grosse Pointe tour performance. This incident, along with growing budgetary and logistical concerns, caused the Board of Trustees to revise its production schedule. As per the May 1970 Report of the Board's New Directions Committee, there was to be neither a December show nor a Christmas tour; instead, a spring show was promised, to be followed by a short tour. Cracked Ice opened in April 1971,

546-549: A nearby ladies' seminary, she gave her son the best education possible. He attended Peoria High School and entered the College of New Jersey (later renamed Princeton University) in the fall of 1878. Later, as president of Princeton, he was instrumental in modifying the entrance requirements for boys of promise from the Western public schools. As an undergraduate he distinguished himself especially in mathematics and on graduation

624-561: A production by a group called the Princeton College Dramatic Association in 1883. In keeping with the practice of all-male institutions at the time, women's roles were played by men. Entr'acte music, provided by the Instrumental or Banjo Clubs, were often popular dance tunes or excerpts from operas. The early theatricals were fundraisers for financially struggling athletic associations. In 1891

702-613: A revue of Triangle favorites, Fool's Gold , rather than the spring show. The following year Triangle hired Miriam Fond, the first female director in the club's history. Triangle finally found a permanent home for its fall productions when The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas opened at the Triangle Broadmead Theatre in November 1984. In the 1980s, the club began to present produce revues of the best of Triangle early in

780-480: A show about Captain Kidd. The "Privateer March" was the first commercially published Triangle song. In 1901, with The King of Pomeru , Triangle ventured for the first time to New York, and the next year the club ventured as far as Pittsburgh. After the 1901 New York performance, Franklin B. Morse 1895 proposed a meeting to organize Triangle alumni, who he believed could help promote the club, build its reputation, arrange

858-460: A smaller campus venue. And during reunions after the end of the spring semester, the year's Triangle Show plays its final performances at McCarter. Among the club's notable alumni are F. Scott Fitzgerald , Booth Tarkington , Russel Wright , Joshua Logan , Brooks Bowman , Jimmy Stewart , José Ferrer , Wayne Rogers , Clark Gesner , Jeff Moss , David E. Kelley , Nicholas Hammond , Zachary Pincus-Roth , and Brooke Shields . The history of

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936-499: A solo evening on March 7, 1930, and returned that same fall with Ted Shawn and the full troupe of the pioneering Denishawn dancers. Few others of significance followed, except for a single performance in 1935 by the American Ballet "– the first troupe of dancers assembled in this country by an émigré Russian choreographer named George Balanchine . In the post World War II years, Broadway dropped out-of-town try-outs, so that

1014-548: A standard element of Triangle shows. By 1910 the tour had extended as far west as Chicago and St. Louis; elaborate social functions were becoming part of the annual trek. With Once in a Hundred Years (1912–13), Triangle moved its tour to the Christmas season, again traveling as far west as St. Louis. The following year, President Wilson and the First Lady attended The Pursuit of Priscilla ’s Washington matinee performance;

1092-631: A street in Princeton and a new mineral discovered by his colleague Alexander H. Phillips. His monument on the campus is the chapel, the nave of which bears his name. On the afternoon of May 16, 1933, while he was returning to Princeton with his wife from Elizabeth, New Jersey , his car collided with a truck on a wet pavement and he died on his way to the Rahway hospital; he was buried in the Princeton Cemetery . His wife died from her injuries

1170-589: Is The Philosophy of the Enlightenment (1910) in the Epochs of Philosophy Series, of which he was the general editor. His account of the development of Kant 's philosophy is masterly, and he ranks Kant as the culminating thinker of the Enlightenment . The Kantian emphasis on moral freedom through intuitive recognition and willing assent to a universally binding moral law was the keynote of his ethics and

1248-520: Is a not-for-profit, professional company on the campus of Princeton University in Princeton, New Jersey . It was incorporated as a nonprofit in 1963. A two-time Tony Award winner, the McCarter’s legacy traces back to the theatre’s first performances in 1930. Thornton Wilder ’s Our Town , Kaufmann and Hart ’s You Can't Take It With You , and William Inge ’s Bus Stop all had their premieres on

1326-710: The Château de Chavaniac , birthplace of the Marquis de Lafayette in Auvergne to serve as a headquarters for the French Heroes Lafayette Memorial Fund , which was managed by Chanler's ex-wife Beatrice Ashley Chanler. When peace came he joined the League of Nations non-partisan organization, worked for disarmament and conciliation, and was one of the first signers of a petition advocating

1404-564: The 1930s, McCarter gained popularity as a pre- Broadway showcase, due to its large seating capacity, its 40-foot proscenium stage, and its short distance from New York. Thornton Wilder 's Our Town had its world premiere at McCarter, as did George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart 's You Can't Take It with You , James Thurber and Elliott Nugent 's The Male Animal (starring Gene Tierney ), Philip Barry 's Without Love (starring Katharine Hepburn ) and William Inge 's Bus Stop (starring Kim Stanley and Elaine Stritch ). McCarter hosted

1482-452: The 75th anniversary show in spite of the fact that number seventy was Tour de Farce , produced only two years earlier. Funny Side Up did not have a smooth start: the writers were slow to produce material, and the trustees even considered the possibility that there would be no show. Because of the diamond jubilee, twenty-one songs from earlier shows were made a part of the program. The tour of Funny Side Up included several southern stops, and

1560-600: The Association visited Trenton once again the following year with Katharine , a Shakespearean spoof marking the first appearance of Booth Tarkington 1893 in the Triangle records. The 1893 production, The Honorable Julius Caesar , was again a reworking of Shakespeare. Tarkington, a senior and president of the Dramatic Association, was both co-author of the book and acted in the role of Cassius. The show

1638-460: The Birmingham visit became problematic when Triangle was booked into a segregated theatre. After some strongly worded letters from Board members, it was determined that the performance would either be cancelled or moved to a non-segregated house. A Different Kick (1968–69) was a Triangle milestone, featuring the first female undergraduate to be cast in a Club show—Sue Jean Lee '70, a junior in

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1716-560: The Broadway theatre and Hollywood. Within a few years the Club would send forth into these professional realms Erik Barnouw '29; C. Norris Houghton , Joshua Logan , and Myron McCormick , all Class of 1931; James Stewart '32; José Ferrer '33; and Nick Foran '34. The 1935 show, Stags at Bay , featured East of the Sun (and West of the Moon), written by Brooks Bowman , which would become

1794-464: The Christmas tour, first because of financial considerations, and then because of alumni criticism about excessive drinking. Another change in tradition came during the 1941-42 academic year, when Triangle produced Ask Me Another , its first show in revue format. Then, at a Board meeting in September 1943, Graduate Treasurer B. Franklin Bunn '07 announced that there would be no Triangle Club activities for

1872-535: The Club needed to generate two-full length musicals in fifteen months, almost twice the writing load of previous years. In September 1997, Triangle began a writing workshop to coordinate the efforts of the writers; this program was enormously successful, producing In Lava and War in April 1998 and 101 Damnations in November 1998. By the spring of 1999, the corps of 21 writers had been so prolific that Triangle presented an extra, original spring show at Theatre Intime , entitled The Rude Olympics . The 1999–2000 season saw

1950-571: The Club performed Breakfast in Bedlam (1959–60) at French and German bases of the American army. Tour de Farce (1961–62) became perhaps the most widely toured show: performances in Pasadena and San Francisco marked the first time the show had been seen live on both coasts, and then troupe members again went to Europe that summer to perform at US Army bases. Funny Side Up (1963–64) was billed as

2028-477: The Club turned to a recent graduate, Post Wheeler '91, in hopes that his magic touch as co-author of The Honorable Julius Caesar could be repeated, and they were pleased with the result. The Mummy (1895–96) was also notable as the first production in Triangle's new home, the Casino, located on the lower campus near the present-day McCarter Theatre site. Yet another innovation was attempted in 1897. A Tiger Lily ,

2106-600: The Critical Languages Program. The University's shift to coeducation the next fall would have a profound effect on Triangle. Call a Spade a Shovel (1969–1970) featured six women in a seventeen-member cast. The social and political commentary of the show, most especially its anti-Vietnam War tones, which reflected the views of the Vietnam Veteran who was president and much of the country, unleashed an unprecedented storm of alumni protest and caused

2184-552: The Dramatic Association joined forces with the University Glee Club to present Po-ca-hon-tas , the first show in the Triangle tradition of musicals written and produced by students. The reworked John Brougham play was performed both on campus and in Trenton. But the faculty vetoed a proposed New York performance. Over the years, students and administrators would often be at odds over theatrical activities. Nevertheless,

2262-595: The First Family then hosted a reception for Triangle at the White House . The Evil Eye (1915-16) had a distinguished pair of neophyte authors: Edmund Wilson '16 wrote the book, and F. Scott Fitzgerald '17 was responsible for the lyrics. Although he was never a cast member in a Triangle production, Fitzgerald wrote three shows for the Club between 1914 and 1917. The club had been criticized in previous years by Drama professor Donald Clive Stuart who asserted, on

2340-491: The McCarter Theatre Company, which was separately incorporated at that time. Executive Director Milton Lyon was followed most notably by Arthur Lithgow , Michael Kahn , and, in the role of artistic director, Nagle Jackson and Emily Mann . Mann's tenure as artistic director was notable for its emphasis on new work with playwrights including Athol Fugard . McCarter commissioned the production and premiered

2418-601: The McCarter stage. Built as a permanent home for the Princeton University Triangle Club (who continue to perform at McCarter) with funds from Thomas N. McCarter , class of 1888, McCarter Theatre opened on February 21, 1930, with a special performance of the 40th annual Triangle show, The Golden Dog . One of its stars was Joshua Logan , then a junior, and sophomore James Stewart was in the chorus; both went on to international fame. During

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2496-545: The Princeton Triangle Club reflects many major social, cultural, economic, political, literary and theatrical trends in the United States during the late 19th and 20th centuries. For most of its history, the club has produced student writing performed by students. Productions are known for blending topical humor with collegiate irreverence; the kickline has become standard. The tradition started with

2574-643: The Princeton University Concerts for fifty years before they moved to Richardson Auditorium. The Philadelphia Orchestra began these concerts at McCarter in 1932, and the Cleveland Orchestra , the New York Philharmonic , Rudolf Serkin , Jascha Heifetz , Myra Hess , Zino Francescatti , and Gregor Piatigorsky followed, among others. The first dancer to perform there was Ruth St. Denis , who appeared in

2652-810: The Tropics , Crowns , Valley Song and Yellowman , have gone on to be some of the most frequently produced plays in the American theater . In addition, McCarter is recognized for its re-investigations of the classic canon, including Stephen Wadsworth ’s adaptations of plays by Marivaux , David Leveaux ’s production of Electra , featuring Zoë Wanamaker , and Emily Mann's adaptations of Anton Chekhov ’s The Cherry Orchard and Uncle Vanya . Two of its 2006–2007 productions, Translations and Radio Golf , moved to Broadway, where they were nominated for Tony Awards . John Grier Hibben John Grier Hibben (April 19, 1861 – May 16, 1933)

2730-685: The Victor Talking Machine Co. about a trial recording. But the major event during this decade was the planning and construction of McCarter Theatre for the Triangle Club. The completed theatre opened on February 21, 1930 with a performance of The Golden Dog . McCarter replaced the long-controversial Casino, which burned on January 8, 1924. Here began the Golden Period for which the Triangle Club became famous, in terms of its eventual contribution of outstanding talent to

2808-468: The annual tour, collect materials and memorabilia, and generally socialize among themselves. In June of that year, thirty-seven alumni met in Princeton, and the Triangle Board of Trustees was established. After 1900, the Triangle became increasingly established. Printed copies of the scripts began appearing (the first was The Man From Where, performed 1903–04). Performing off campus and on became

2886-521: The black, a situation that would become increasingly serious as the decade wore on. President Dodds had also heard alumni criticism about poor acting and an apparent lack of coaching in connection with the latest show. Yet he remained confident that Triangle could play an important role on campus. Later that year, Club Manager Stryker Warren '35 received a stern letter from Dean of the College Christian Gauss. Gauss had considered canceling

2964-566: The canceling of all war debts. He was awarded the French Légion d'honneur in 1919. He had supported the Eighteenth Amendment but changed his attitude, recognizing that it was unenforceable and in his own observation had effects the very opposite of its purpose. His friendship with Col. Charles Lindbergh , with whom he was in daily contact after the tragic kidnaping at Hopewell, New Jersey , intensified his interest in

3042-464: The club's debts. A 1955 study stated that there were ninety or more members of the club, and that most of the men participated in the Christmas tour. A third of them said that they had participated in theatrical productions before enrolling at Princeton. Most members were also active in a collegiate sport. Spree de Corps (1955–56) marked the debut of Milton Lyon as Triangle director. From 1955 until his death forty years later, Lyon would direct all but

3120-620: The daughter of John and Adelia (Waite) Davidson. John Davidson was a native of Berwick-upon-Tweed , and an eminent New York lawyer. On November 8, 1887, Hibben and Jenny were married. He was ordained as a minister of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America by the Carlisle Presbytery on May 19, 1887, having served the Second Presbyterian Church at St. Louis, Missouri for

3198-592: The duration of the war. The University assumed control of McCarter Theatre during this period, and the building was leased by the military for trainees’ use on campus. In November 1945, the University Committee on Undergraduate Activities issued a report describing Triangle as controversial. The first post-war show, Clear the Track , opened in December 1946 and even managed a seven-city tour. But Triangle

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3276-538: The fall to introduce the freshman class to the organization. The club's centennial was celebrated in 1991 with a series of campus events throughout the year, including the spring show entitled The Older, the Better , a large Firestone Library exhibition of hundreds of items from the Triangle Archives, and a fall reunion weekend of parties and performances. The centennial of 1991 was difficult to reconcile with

3354-540: The few times that a freshman was ever allowed to join Triangle. During the early 1920s, New York performances began to be booked at the Metropolitan Opera House, although initially there was some concern whether they could fill such a large theatre and whether the men's voices would be strong enough. Late in 1923, there were negotiations concerning a possible radio broadcast, and in the same year Triangle's music publisher, J. Church Co., corresponded with

3432-412: The field of science at Princeton during this period is attributable largely to Hibben's generous recognition of the leadership of Dean Henry Burchard Fine . Hibben's educational philosophy is expounded in A Defense of Prejudice (1911). He defended the ideas that underlie the traditional "liberal education," pleaded for the humanities, and, while he recognized the role of "pure" science, his own interest

3510-485: The fiftieth anniversary show ( Once Over Lightly ), which had been staged in 1938-39. After much debate, it had been decided that the first original work in the Triangle tradition was Po-ca-hon-tas of 1891, justifying the 1991 centennial. In the late 1990s, the production schedule reverted to its original calendar, in which the new Triangle Show premiered at McCarter in the fall of each academic year, followed in winter by that show's tour. This change meant that in 1997-1998

3588-514: The first Triangle show to be based on Princeton student life, was part of a double bill with Lend Me Five Shillings , a British farce. Since neither show was a great success, the Club returned to the tried and true in 1898 with a revival of Po-ca-hon-tas . The Privateer , presented in 1899, was originally entitled The Captain's Kidd Sister , but the name was changed because the University of Pennsylvania's Mask and Wig Club had already produced

3666-574: The first time since When Congress Came to Princeton (1908–09). The production was well received, but the club was already beginning to feel the effects of the Great Depression. In October 1930, the Program Manager reported, "Due to the financial depression, the business of getting ads is a rather difficult one just now." By the following year economic conditions had begun to affect the tour. South Orange reported poor ticket sales, and

3744-537: The following years, this small group would undergo periodic name changes, being known as Triangle Ding! and Triangle Bit Parts before returning to Ding! , as it is called today. With the gradual elimination of passenger trains in the late 1950s, the club began touring by bus. Early in 1960 there was a proposal to produce a motion picture on the Triangle Club, but a Hollywood writers' strike and possible heavy expenses brought an end to this publicity idea. However, Triangle did embark on its first European tour that summer;

3822-536: The front page of the Princeton University newspaper, that the plays were "too burlesque" and lacked novelty, especially when compared to theatrical culture at other Ivy League schools. During 1917–18, a four man Triangle troupe toured Europe to entertain the soldiers stationed there for World War I. After the year hiatus, the club became active again with a revival of The Honorable Julius Caesar . The first post-war tour occurred when The Isle of Surprise

3900-507: The fulcrum of his opposition to all forms of utilitarianism and pragmatism. In "The Vocation of the Scholar," in the volume A Defense of Prejudice, he opposes William James 's "creed of change," with this declaration of philosophical fundamentalism: "There are certain ideas which in the history of the race experience have become established for all time, for all places, and for all persons and things" (pp. 146–47). Hibben's interest in

3978-478: The hundredth anniversary of the kickline in The Blair Arch Project (November 1999), as well as Triangle's return to Theatre Intime in May with The Rude Olympics II: American Booty . Puns of Steel (2000–2001) became the first Club show to record its score on a CD. The Club's current calendar includes a Frosh Week Show during the first week of classes, the new Triangle Show premiere in November,

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4056-623: The later to work first in Philadelphia, where they were made to earn their fee by playing with the regular orchestra, and then in Washington, where they provided the intermission music. Despite ongoing debate in the 1950s about the club's obligations to theatrical professionalism, as well as its questionable effect on the University's reputation, Triangle continued to reach a wider audience through greater media exposure. In 1948, All in Favor

4134-612: The life of the nation was keen. In the little volume The Higher Patriotism (1915—translated into Japanese, Chinese, and Spanish) may be discerned the deeper reasons for his ardent advocacy of the Allies in the First World War . Against the doctrine that "there is no law above the state" his ethical sense rebelled, and he declared, "No more damnable doctrine was ever uttered" (p. 35). From 1914 to 1917 he stirred large audiences with his appeals for national preparedness, and during

4212-547: The local alumni chairman was concerned with keeping down the cost of stagehands; in Pittsburgh, a poor house and lack of entertainment were attributed to the weak stock market. When It's the Valet (1932–33) was ready to tour, local alumni groups were either unwilling to sponsor a show or unable to guarantee an adequate sum to cover expenses, let alone show a profit. The club's Graduate Board sought aid from alumni in underwriting

4290-416: The most popular and longest-lasting national hit ever to come out of the Triangle Club. Recorded by Frank Sinatra and Louis Armstrong , among many others, East of the Sun still provides the club with royalties. Other songs from the same show, by Bowman, included "Love and Dime" and "Will Love Find a Way?" With The Tiger Smiles (1930–31), Triangle writers returned to a Princeton town and gown setting for

4368-960: The national tour in late January, a spring showcase of new writers' material in April/May, and an encore performance in early summer for reunions. The Club continues to receive a high level of regional recognition, with the 2007 Triangle Show A Turnpike Runs Through It appearing in The New York Times . Booth Tarkington 1893 – * F. Scott Fitzgerald 1917 – Russel Wright '21 and '22 – Joshua Logan '31 – James Stewart '32 – José Ferrer '34 – Brooks Bowman '36 – Bo Goldman '53 – Wayne Rogers '56 – Clark Gesner '60 – Jeff Moss '63 – A. Scott Berg '71 – David E. Kelley '79 – Cecil Hoffman '84 – Louis Bayard '85 – Brooke Shields '87 – Ellie Kemper '02 – Michael Yang '04 – Molly Ephraim '08 see List of Princeton Triangle Club shows McCarter Theatre McCarter Theatre Center

4446-400: The norm, which led faculty to vett texts and performances were vetted before the students left campus with their show. Jenny Davidson Hibben, the wife of Princeton President John Grier Hibben , cut off-color passages or topics she considered morally inappropriate. She was a practicing Presbyterian . In 1907, the first kickline was performed. It was part of The Mummy Monarch, but soon became

4524-533: The performance of Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike by Christopher Durang , which went on to win the 2013 Tony Award for Best Play . In the 1990s and early 2000s McCarter underwent major renovations and expansions including construction of a smaller second theater adjacent to the main auditorium (the Roger S. Berlind Theater, named for the Princeton graduate and producer), allowing two productions to be mounted simultaneously. Artistic Director Sarah Rasmussen

4602-581: The show, but individual contributions were equally difficult to come by. Throughout the mid-thirties, Triangle continued to tour in spite of the Depression, but there were rumblings of discontent from both the Graduate Board of the Club and the University administration. In a 1934 meeting with President Dodds, the Board indicated concern about the financial condition of McCarter Theatre; Triangle profits were insufficient to keep McCarter operating in

4680-704: The start of the American Civil War , on the day when Abraham Lincoln proclaimed a blockade of the Southern ports. He was the only son of the Rev. Samuel and Elizabeth (Grier) Hibben. The Hibbens were of Scottish and Scots-Irish descent. His father came from Hillsboro, Ohio , to the pastorate of the Presbyterian church in Peoria, and on the outbreak of the American Civil War volunteered for service as

4758-410: The suppression of crime. He never held public office though he was often mentioned for an ambassadorship. He declined feelers for a Senatorial campaign after his retirement in 1932. The honor which he most appreciated was the establishment by several thousand alumni of the Hibben Loan Fund for students in financial straits. A scholarship in Princeton founded by a Yale alumnus also bears his name, as does

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4836-533: The theatre could no longer be self-supporting. In 1950, Princeton University and the Triangle Club agreed that the university should take acquire the building and assume responsibility for its operating costs. The season 1960–1961 saw the establishment of a new company producing original work under the artistic direction of Ellis Rabb . Actors in the new company included Rosemary Harris , Donald Moffat , Frances Sternhagen , and Edward Asner . In 1963, Princeton University transferred its direct operation of McCarter to

4914-499: The upper-class eating clubs and reforming dormitories by housing undergraduate students in quadrangles presided over by members of the faculty. Hibben kept aloof from these acrimonious debates, but allied himself with the group opposed to the quad system, not because of sympathy with the clubs, but because he did not want to alienate a large number of alumni . Following Wilson's resignation in 1910 to become Governor of New Jersey , there were two years of agitation, before Hibben

4992-485: The war dedicated his own and the university's resources to national service. President Hibben, his wife, and daughter were in Europe when World War I began and returned to the United States aboard the Campania in September 1914. In December 1916 Hibben, Theodore Roosevelt and other philanthropists including Scottish-born industrialist John C. Moffat, William A. Chanler , Joseph Choate , Clarence Mackay , George von Lengerke Meyer , and Nicholas Murray Butler purchased

5070-410: Was a Presbyterian minister, a philosopher , and educator . He served as president of Princeton University from 1912–1932, succeeding Woodrow Wilson and implementing many of the reforms started by Wilson. His term as President began after the term of Acting Princeton President Stewart, who served for two years after Wilson's departure. Hibben was born in Peoria , Illinois , just before

5148-437: Was a resolute defender of academic freedom , protecting members of the faculty whose "radical" views brought irate protests to his office. The university endowment increased fivefold; the size of the faculty doubled; a four-course plan of study in the upper classes was initiated; the work of the scientific departments was extended; and the schools of architecture, engineering, and public affairs were founded. The great expansion in

5226-664: Was appointed in late 2020; Executive Director Martin Miller joined the theatre in 2023. McCarter publicity claims that 100,000 community members participate in the company’s work every year, among them 6,000 students. It is a member company of the New Jersey Theatre Alliance . Under former Artistic Director Emily Mann , noteworthy productions include the premieres of new plays by Athol Fugard , Edward Albee , Nilo Cruz , Christopher Durang , Regina Taylor , Beth Henley , Dael Orlandersmith , Steven Dietz , Marina Carr , John Henry Redwood , Eric Bogosian , Theresa Rebeck and Emily Mann. Many, including Having Our Say , Anna in

5304-404: Was awarded a mathematical fellowship . He was valedictorian of his class and its president from 1882 to his death in 1933. After graduation, in 1882, he spent a year in philosophical studies at the University of Berlin . On his return he entered the Princeton Theological Seminary , and while there taught French and German at the Lawrenceville School . He met his future wife, Jenny Davidson,

5382-506: Was beset with problems the following year for All Rights Reserved (1947–48). The Daily Princetonian reported, "All Rights pretty nearly weren't reserved. A play by the same name had fizzled on Broadway for a bare month, in 1934, and the petulant playwright threatened to sue. Hasty consultation with a Broadway lawyer revealed that the author could not possibly win the suit and that matter was closed." The club resolved tricky labor questions by employing union stagehands and music-hirelings, putting

5460-399: Was broadcast on WNBC-TV, becoming the first college show to appear on the new medium of television. The entire score of Too Hot for Toddy (1950–51) was recorded, and members of the cast appeared on The Kate Smith Show and Ed Sullivan's The Toast of the Town . Club productions appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show from 1950 to 1957. During the Christmas tour to Cincinnati, the club's appearance

5538-446: Was combined with a large-scale alumni gathering. Finally, in 1953, a memorandum of agreement was drawn up between Princeton University and the Trustees of the Triangle Club abrogating the McCarter agreement of the 1920s. The club had been unable to cover operating expenses and pay the taxes of the Theatre. A full-time general manager was hired for McCarter, and the University, which had been underwriting Triangle's losses, agreed to cancel

5616-535: Was elected fourteenth president of Princeton. He retired in 1932 on the fiftieth anniversary of his graduation. At the start of his presidency, Princeton was torn by the controversies started during Wilson's administration. Hibben agreed with Wilson's introduction of the preceptorial system in 1905. This system revitalized traditional methods of instruction such as lectures and recitations by including small discussion groups and stimulating independent reading and study. Hibben did not support Wilson's proposal to eliminate

5694-399: Was elected president, though not unanimously, chiefly on the ground that Princeton's first need was peace and that Hibben was best fitted to promote it. His election was a victory for the anti-Wilson group, but in his inaugural address he declared that he represented no faction but a united Princeton. He encouraged larger alumni and faculty participation in the governance of the university and

5772-572: Was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1912. Hibben had known Woodrow Wilson since they were undergraduates together. They became close friends. Indeed when Wilson became president of Princeton in 1902 Hibben was his chief advisor. In 1912 Hibben stunned Wilson by taking the lead against Wilson's pet reform plan. They were permanently estranged, and Wilson was decisively defeated. Wilson left Princeton in 1910 to become governor of New Jersey. In 1912, Hibben

5850-649: Was repeated for alumni in June, but did finally tour the following December. To cut expenses, the cast and crew stayed in private homes rather than hotels, and non-union halls were booked. The Princeton Triangle Workshop made its debut in November 1972 with a presentation of The Fantasticks at the Princeton Inn Theater; the following March the Workshop produced Transitions in Wilcox Hall. This began

5928-566: Was repeated the following year with several significant changes. Most importantly, the Princeton University Dramatic Association had been renamed the Triangle Club of Princeton. Financial problems caused Club members to curtail expenses in 1895. Neither the February production, Who's Who , nor the May offering, Snowball , were written by students, and both had relatively small casts. The following year

6006-519: Was taken on the road during Christmas break of 1919. The Christmas tour reached as far as Nashville, Tennessee in 1922; the club presented a musical comedy called Espanola at Nashville's Orpheum Theater. In the spring of 1922, Triangle staged George Bernard Shaw's The Devil's Disciple . This production marked a milepost in the Club's history, for its three female roles were actually played by women. Sets for this production were designed and painted by Russel Wright during his freshman year, marking one of

6084-498: Was to conserve and revitalize the inheritance of the past. His philosophical writings include: Inductive Logic (1896); The Problems of Philosophy (1898); Hegel 's Logic (1902); Deductive and Inductive Logic (1905). All of these show mathematical precision of statement and lucid exposition. His books on logic , though later superseded, still constituted a valuable approach to the Hegelian system. His most enduring contribution

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