Theatre
Year | Production | Role | Theatre(s) | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1969 | The Gingham Dog | John Golden Theatre | ||
1968 | Saint Joan | Joan | Vivian Beaumont Theatre | |
Tiger at the Gates | Cassandra | Vivian Beaumont Theatre | ||
We Bombed in New Haven | Ruth | Ambassador Theatre | ||
1965 | The Premise | The Premise | Improvisational theatre with material by the performers. | |
1964 | Blues for Mister Charlie | Juanita | ANTA Playhouse | Tony Award nomination, Best Featured Actress in a Play |
The Owl and the Pussycat | Doris W. | ANTA Playhouse Royale Theatre |
Tony Award nomination, Best Actress in a Play | |
1963 | The Living Premise | Obie Award, Distinguished Performance | ||
1962 | Tiger, Tiger Burning Bright | Adelaide Smith | Booth Theatre | Theatre World Award |
1959 | A Raisin in the Sun | Beneatha Younger | Ethel Barrymore Theatre Belasco Theatre |
Outer Critics Circle Award, Best Drama Performance |
Read more about this topic: Diana Sands, Selected Credits
Famous quotes containing the word theatre:
“Glorious bouquets and storms of applause ... are the trimmings which every artist naturally enjoys. But to move an audience in such a role, to hear in the applause that unmistakable note which breaks through good theatre manners and comes from the heart, is to feel that you have won through to life itself. Such pleasure does not vanish with the fall of the curtain, but becomes part of ones own life.”
—Dame Alice Markova (b. 1910)
“The theatre is a gross art, built in sweeps and over-emphasis. Compromise is its second name.”
—Enid Bagnold (18891981)
“The History of the world is not the theatre of happiness. Periods of happiness are blank pages in it, for they are periods of harmonyperiods when the antithesis is in abeyance.”
—Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (17701831)