Institute of Outdoor Drama
Institute of Outdoor Drama
Institute of Outdoor Drama
UNC - Chapel Hill
Institute of Outdoor Drama
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Special North Carolina Press Page

Institute of Outdoor Drama
Institute of Outdoor Drama

This web page provides a selection of photographs of North Carolina's outdoor dramas (for an online listing of all state dramas, click here). These photographs are currently available in .jpg format at 300 dpi resolution for universal compatibility. If you would like to see other photographs, click over to the Institute's media page or contact the Institute of Outdoor Drama via email at outdoor@unc.edu or by telephone, (919) 962-1328. We can provide these and other pictures in any number of formats for your use.

PICTURE DOWNLOADING INSTRUCTIONS: Simply click on the picture you would like below. A larger version will load into your web browser (a 300 or more dpi .jpg file, suitable for printing). When it has finished loading, either right-click (in Windows) or click-and-hold (in Macintosh) and select the option for "Save File As..."

Outdoor Drama in North Carolina Locator Map

Click the map to print this .pdf file (you will need Acrobat Reader)

NC Drama Map

 

A young Waldensian couple arrives in America from France in a scene from the outdoor historical drama From This Day Forward produced each summer in Valdese, NC.


British militia do battle with American settlers led by frontiersman Daniel Boone in the Boone, NC outdoor historical drama, Horn in the West.

John Borden (right), one of Sir Walter Raleigh's young colonists headed for what will become North Carolina, displays his prowess with sword and dagger in a dramatic scene with Spanish pilot Simon Fernando in the outdoor historical drama The Lost Colony in Manteo, NC

In the outdoor drama Pathway to Freedom, produced every summer in Snow Camp, NC, a young Quaker girl (left) is comforted by a local slave as they ponder the danger they face by helping to establish the Underground Railroad prior to the American Civil War.

An angry Quaker girl confronts invading British troops as they march through central North Carolina during the American Revolutionary War in the outdoor drama Sword of Peace, dramatized each summer in Snow Camp, NC.

The famous eagle dance during a scene of celebration in the outdoor drama Unto These Hills, produced every summer on the Cherokee Indian Reservation, in Cherokee.

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The cast of Shakespeare on the Green's prodution of
As You Like It
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Montford Park Player's production of Much Ado About Nothing



Moonshine and Thunder: The Junior Johnson Story
Born in Wilkes County, North Carolina, in 1931, Junior Johnson was a legendary moonshiner and a NASCAR superstar in the 1950s and 1960s. He won the Daytona 500 in 1960.



Tom Dooley: A Wilkes County Legend portrays the love triange surrounding the 1866 murder of Laura Foster (pictured). Well publicized in its day as a crime of passion, , "Tom Dooley," became a North Carolina folk song, first sung after Dooley's execution.

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Institute of Outdoor Drama
Institute of Outdoor Drama