The show will run again today at 3 p.m. and tomorrow at 2 p.m. in front of Memorial Church. The show will also run next weekend in the ARCO Forum at the Institute of Politics.
Other groups used the outdoor environment to their advantage. A garden in Radcliffe Yard formed a perfect stage for some students in Literature and Arts C-25, "The Medieval Stage," who performed a medieval play about creation.
In front of the science center, Louisa May Alcott (actress Marianne Donnelly '84) tried to entice students into games of Rigamarole, or Rigmarole, as she spells it in "her century."
Alcott, who described her famous novel Little Women as "moral pap," said Harvard students were generally too busy to talk with her for very long.
"People are so much in a hurry in your century," she complained.
Hurried Harvard students should find the rest of Arts First weekend to be perfect for their schedules, as the campus will become a hotbed of Arts First activities.
Pick up a brochure in the square or your house, and you can find a listing of all the activities going today and tomorrow. Or just walk into the Square or the Yard, and you will probably be a part of them