

There are 19 'musical moments' in the show, lots with complicated harmonies or group dances. (Not actually, there are wires controlled by big burly men in the flies, it's just made to look like it's me. Ropes in my hands that hold award winning actors' lives at the end of them. We are creating the castles he conquers, the knights he vanquishes (on their steeds) the damsels in distress he rescues, the giants/windmills he defeats. In terms of set changes we the company are quite literally building Don Quixote's world around him. There are most certainly another 59 un-quick changes (which mean the actor has at least three minutes to get into his/her costume). The dressers have 59 quick changes to do in total.

Every member of the company has around 10 different costumes in the show, ranging from a dirtied up galley slave in chains to a duchess in full farthingale, corset, ruff and fan. Mac Armour Physics Fellows work on innovative projects in the field and share the results of their work with the Rhodes community to inform and inspire their peers.If there was a production that one would hope to have a dress rehearsal for, it was this one.

To continue its long history of involvement of undergraduate students in physics-related investigations, this award provides a summer stipend for research in the physics department. The Physics department gives the following awards each year to exceptional physics students at the annual Awards Convocation at the end of the spring term.Īward for Excellence in Physics by a First-Year StudentĪ cash award given to the first-year student exhibiting the highest achievement in physics course and laboratory work.Ī cash award given to a student who has excelled in independent research in physics.Ī cash award to the student who has shown outstanding dedication to the discipline of physics as exhibited by service to the department, participation in events that foster an interest in physics, and the promotion of an attitude of service towards fellow students, colleagues, and the public.Ī scholarship award given to a sophomore or junior physics major exhibiting outstanding academic achievement in both physics and all other coursework.
