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The Roundtable presses on as another Friday is upon us. It seems like every year, there are certain positions that have build up depth and are seen as a strength of the time. Likewise, other. ....
Mary Ahern, Who Produced Early TV and Then Preserved It, Dies at 98 Ms. Ahern was a key behind-the-scenes figure in the landmark series “Omnibus” before becoming the Paley Center for Media’s first curator. Mary V. Ahern in the late 1970s, around the time she became curator of the Museum of Broadcasting, now the Paley Center for Media. Credit.via Sue Rice May 20, 2021, 2:45 p.m. ET Mary V. Ahern, who was an important behind-the-scenes figure on the cultural magazine show “Omnibus” and other early television programs, then helped preserve those and similar touchstones of television history as the Paley Center for Media’s first curator, died on May 1 at a care center in Peabody, Mass. She was 98. ....
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The many curtain calls of Dallas’ Magnolia Lounge From talking motion pictures to live theater, this versatile performance space from the ’30s in Fair Park has seen it all. Margo Jones (right) of Theater 54 points out the play scheduled at the theater for March 23, 1954, to Mrs. Al Silver (left) and Mr. and Mrs. Arch B. Swank Jr. (Patsy Swank). Photograph published in The Dallas Morning News on Jan. 17, 1954.(DMN File Photo) The Magnolia Lounge in Fair Park has lived several lives. During the Texas Centennial Exposition in 1936, it served as a rest stop for fairgoers, and shortly after, it was reconfigured into a performance space for traveling vaudeville performers. Ten years after the lounge’s opening, theater powerhouse Margo Jones fashioned it into one of America’s first professional theater-in-the-round stages: a layout where audience members surrounded the stage. ....