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4 results for "Unto These Hills (Play)"
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Record #:
1101
Author(s):
Abstract:
Anderson provides a behind-the-scenes glimpse at the annual outdoor drama in Cherokee, North Carolina.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 61 Issue 1, June 1993, p28-31, por
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Record #:
32214
Author(s):
Abstract:
Three historical outdoor dramas are presented in North Carolina every summer. The oldest of North Carolina’s outdoor dramas is “The Lost Colony,” which portrays the events leading to the colony’s disappearance. The drama “Horn in the West” tells the story of Daniel Boone, and “Unto These Hills” portrays the struggle of the Cherokee Indians to live in peace in their own native land.
Source:
Carolina Country (NoCar HD 9688 N8 C38x), Vol. 2 Issue 7, July 1970, p6-7, por
Record #:
349
Author(s):
Abstract:
The history of outdoor dramas in North Carolina begins with \"The Lost Colony\" in 1937 and includes the productions of \"Unto These Hills,\" a Cherokee drama, and \"From This Day Forward,\" a drama depicting the Waldensians, a group of French- Italian Protestants who immigrated to America in 1893.
Source:
NC Insight (NoCar JK 4101 .N3x), Vol. 5 Issue 4, Feb 1983, p15-21, il, por, f
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Record #:
20384
Abstract:
This is a reprint of a paper presented at the fiftieth annual session of the State Literary and Historical Association in Raleigh, December, 1950. This paper examines the origins of Kermit Hunter's outdoor historical dramatization of Cherokee contact with European settlers entitled \"Unto These Hills,\" which opened in 1950, as well as the history of colonial and state relations with the Cherokee people that serves as the setting for the play.
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