Broadway dancer and actor Sondra Lee, who helped shape “Peter Pan” and “Hello, Dolly!,” has died at 97. Her friend, the Rev.
In First Stage's new "Peter Pan and Wendy," director Jeff Frank uses special stage helpers to make characters fly.
The timeless magic of J M Barrie’s Peter Pan will soar to dazzling new heights as sky-theatre specialists, Lumina Drones, unveils the world’s first Peter Pan drone light show at Ragley Hall in ...
Hosted on MSN
Peter Pan Has a New Series On the Horizon, And It Will Force the Lost Boy Grow Up at Last
Peter Pan and his never-ending childhood have remained fascinating for generations. All adventures must come to an end sometime, however, and an upcoming BOOM! Studios comic series by Dan Panosian and ...
Peter Pan may be “the boy who won’t grow up,” but that doesn’t mean he can’t adapt to more enlightened times. A new national tour of the musical based on the beloved adventurer redresses some longtime ...
Color TV sets first came out in 1954. By the next year, fewer than 1% of U.S. homes had a color TV. For that matter, only about half the homes in the U.S. had a TV set at all in 1955. Nevertheless, on ...
No Film School on MSN
Peter Pan and the philosophy of never growing up
J.M. Barrie opens his 1911 novel, Peter and Wendy, with “All children, except one, grow up.” ...
Sondra Lee, who starred on Broadway in the productions of “Hello, Dolly!” and “Peter Pan,” died on Monday. She was 97. Lee died of natural causes in her New York City apartment, her friend and ...
Sondra Lee, a Broadway actor whose petit size allowed her, at 26, to convincingly play the Native American child princess ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results