Dr. Knock, Jules Romains' astringent comedy on the triumph of medicine over the modern mind, received a barely lukewarm performance at the play's opening Tuesday night in the Tufts' Arena. The play, ...
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Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click. Health care reform of a darkly comic kind drives Dr. Knock, Or The Triumph Of ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Theater Review | 'Doctor Knock, or the Triumph of Medicine' “Doctor Knock, or the Triumph of Medicine”: From left, Scott Barrow, Thomas M. Hammond and ...
The 1923 satirical comedy “Doctor Knock, or the Triumph of Medical Science,” now in a well-acted if wearying production at City Lit, is a classic in France. Here in the States, the play and its author ...
This very amusing 1923 satire by Jules Romains, a tremendous hit in its day, hasn’t been seen in New York for seventy-two years. As Dr. Knock prepares to take over a sleepy practice in the provincial ...
Bastille Day was last week and in tardy celebration the Loeb has set off a forty-four year old Romains candle, which not surprisingly fizzled. Dr. Knock, by French playwright Jules Romains, has ...