Ad
related to: bill cain jesuit playwright biography children
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Bill Cain, SJ (c. 1947–), is an American playwright and Jesuit priest. He founded a Shakespeare company in Boston, [ when? ] [ 1 ] and the New York Times has praised him for his "impish humor". [ 1 ]
Cain is a Jesuit priest. [1] [2] The play's title refers to Dante Alighieri's Inferno—in which Dante navigates a descent into the "nine circles of hell". In Cain's play, Green passes through his discharge from the Army and various judicial and administrative procedures, roughly paralleling the nine circles of Dante's Inferno. Cain structured ...
Nothing Sacred is an American drama series that aired from 1997 to 1998 on ABC.The series was created by a Jesuit priest named Bill Cain and producer David Manson.. The series centered on the daily goings-on at a parish in an inner-city neighborhood.
Equivocation is a 2009 play by Bill Cain that premiered at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. It takes place in an alternate history in 17th Century England where Robert Cecil commissions William Shakespeare (referred to as Shagspeare) to write an official history play about the Gunpowder Plot to assassinate King James I .
Bill Cain (athletic director) (fl. 1975–1980), American athletic director Bill Cain (basketball) (fl. 1970), player in Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball Bill Cain (fl. 1990s–2000s), American playwright
Lope de Vega - Spanish Baroque playwright and poet (Colegio Imperial de Madrid) Eduardo López de Romaña - President of Peru (Stonyhurst College) Federico García Lorca - Spanish poet and playwright (attended Jesuit school as a boy in Grenada) Henri de Lubac - French theologian (Gregorian University in Rome, Italy)
This is a non-diffusing subcategory of Category:American dramatists and playwrights. It includes dramatists and playwrights that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent.
Halldór Laxness – journalist, novelist, playwright, poet and short-story writer; recipient of the 1955 Nobel Prize in Literature, pre-1927 works only; Jón Sveinsson – Jesuit children's writer; lived in France after age 13, but wrote children's books in Icelandic