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  1. Kenneth Macgowan (1888-1963) was an active participant in Greenwich Village's theater scene as early as 1919, when he served on the Advisory Board of the Theatre Guild until 1922. In that year, Macgowan succeeded George Cram Cook as the director of the Provincetown Playhouse, where he worked alongside his close friend Eugene O'Neill.

  2. Kenneth Macgowan (November 30, 1888 – April 27, 1963) was an American film producer. He won an Academy Award for Best Color Short Film for La Cucaracha (1934), the first live-action short film made in the three-color Technicolor process.

  3. KENNETH MACGOWAN (1888-1963) A Memorial Tribute Presented to the AMERICAN EDUCATIONAL THEATRE ASSOCIATION The liveliness of Kenneth Macgowan, who died on April 27, 1963, shortly af-ter he had seen the opening of the first play in UCLA's new Theater Arts building named in his honor, was an integral part of anything he did. His

  4. Overview. Kenneth Macgowan. (1888—1963) Quick Reference. (1888–1963) American producer and critic. Educated at Harvard, Macgowan reviewed plays for major newspapers and Theatre Arts magazine. The Theatre of Tomorrow (1921) and Continental Stagecraft (with Robert Edmond Jones ...

  5. Kenneth Macgowan (1888-1963) was a drama critic for newspapers and magazines, a publicity director, producer and director with the Actor's Theater (1927-29), and the first department chair at the UCLA Theater Arts Department (1946-58).

  6. Kenneth Macgowan (1888-1963) was a drama critic for newspapers and magazines, a publicity director, producer and director with the Actor's Theater (1927-29), and the first department chair at the UCLA Theater Arts Department (1946-58).

  7. Behind the Screen: The History and Techniques of the Motion Picture, Volume 1. Kenneth Macgowan. Delacorte Press, 1965 - Motion-pictures - 528 pages.

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