John Dunning Quote

There was an uneasiness in doing the Blitzstein play, which had deep anti-capitalist themes. It gave a vivid picture of an industrial tyrant, boss of the fictional Steeltown, and the fight of Labor against his tyranny. The WPA was already under fire for staging what some people thought were too many labor plays, and there were rumblings in Washington that its funds might be cut. The shoe fell less than three weeks before the June 16, 1937, preview—a sweeping WPA funds cut, followed by a directive prohibiting new openings until the reorganization caused by the cuts was implemented. Welles flew to Washington to argue his case. Failing in that, he threatened to open the play himself. The government’s response was severe: as Houseman would recall it in his memoir, on June 15 a dozen uniformed guards took over the building in force. Project members arriving to sign in found their theater sealed and dark. The Cossacks, as they came to be known, guarded the front of the house and the box office; they hovered in the alley outside the dressing rooms with orders to see that no government property was used or removed.

John Dunning

There was an uneasiness in doing the Blitzstein play, which had deep anti-capitalist themes. It gave a vivid picture of an industrial tyrant, boss of the fictional Steeltown, and the fight of Labor against his tyranny. The WPA was already under fire for staging what some people thought were too many labor plays, and there were rumblings in Washington that its funds might be cut. The shoe fell less than three weeks before the June 16, 1937, preview—a sweeping WPA funds cut, followed by a directive prohibiting new openings until the reorganization caused by the cuts was implemented. Welles flew to Washington to argue his case. Failing in that, he threatened to open the play himself. The government’s response was severe: as Houseman would recall it in his memoir, on June 15 a dozen uniformed guards took over the building in force. Project members arriving to sign in found their theater sealed and dark. The Cossacks, as they came to be known, guarded the front of the house and the box office; they hovered in the alley outside the dressing rooms with orders to see that no government property was used or removed.

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About John Dunning

John Dunning may refer to:

John Dunning (businessman) (born 1934), British businessman, founder of Westmorland Motorway Services
John Dunning (detective fiction author) (1942–2023), American writer of detective fiction
John Dunning (true crime author) (1918–1990), true crime author
John Dunning (snooker player) (1927–2009), English professional snooker player
John Harry Dunning (1927–2009), British economist
John Dunning (film editor) (1916–1991), American film editor
John Dunning (film producer) (1927–2011), Canadian film producer
John R. Dunning (1907–1975), American physicist
Jack Dunning (John Angus Dunning, 1903–1971), New Zealand Test cricketer
John Dunning, 1st Baron Ashburton (1731–1783), English lawyer and politician
John Dunning (volleyball) (born 1950), American volleyball coach