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Box 4: Speeches and Lectures, 1951-1977

 File — Box: M035.0004
Identifier: M035.03.0004

Abstract

This box contains speeches and lectures given by Russell Porter in chronological order. Speeches include: Burlington Commencement (1951), World Affairs on Radio and Television (1956), Radio-TV conference (1959), New Technologies in Education (1959), Charge to the Class of 1964 (1960), A Gathering of Some Importance (1961), Colorado Broadcasters Association (1961), New Goal for New Media (1962), Broadcasting's New Challenge (1962), Kiwanis Convention (1962), The DU Centennial (1962), Charge to the Freshman Class (1962), Founders Day (1963), Rocky Mountain Speech Conference (1964), Centennial Speech (1964), Speech regarding DU Theatre Department (1964), Childrens Theater (1964), Speech regarding Religious Experience (1964), Education in the Age of Communication (1965), AETA (1965), The Right to Succeed (1970), The Use of Special Events in Shaping an Institution's Future (1970), Graduate Study in Theatre, and Misc.

Dates

  • 1951-1977

Creator

Extent

1 Items : (1) record box

Scope and Contents

From the Collection:

The materials in this collection document the professional life of R. Russell Porter while he was a member of the faculty of the University of Denver, from 1946 until his retirement in 1976. Administrative materials provide a chronological framework for the artistic works that follow. They include biographies, obituaries, press releases and newspaper clippings, faculty personnel records and evaluations, insurance packages, travel records, brochures, personal papers, interviews, photographs and correspondence. The papers and speeches reflect U.S. society at the time. One paper discusses the assassination of U. S. Attorney General Robert Kennedy, and another the concert at Woodstock, New York. Several concern race relations and the University's responsibility to equal opportunity. Many papers are concerned with the University, and how it could be positioned to successfully educate young people. Several address the current and future state of the American theater. The bulk of the material is composed of artistic works by Porter and others. In some cases, only the finished product is represented. In others, only a program, a press release or piece of correspondence documents the existence of a work. Several drafts of a play (Shale Oil) show the evolution of a particular creation. Early Dawn is particularly well documented, with drafts and correspondence between Porter and Normand Lockwood revealing how a librettist and a composer collaborate to create a work of art. The collection also includes works by Porter including scholarly articles, speeches, radio scripts, plays, and librettos along with documentation such as playbills, correspondence, publicity photographs, and newspaper clippings. The final segment of the collection includes plays by others to be considered for production at the University of Denver Theatre.

Repository Details

Part of the Special Collections and Archives Repository

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