2 Read the page from Lisa's diary and answer the questions.
1. Which club did Lisa give up on?
2. Which club did Lisa decide to concentrate on?
3. Who is the director of Lisa's new club?
4. What did Jasper's job use to be?
5. What did Jasper use to do at the time of the Cold War?
6. What made Jasper sad?
14 July Camp Pineland
All of these problems with David and Daniel were getting on my nerves so much that I decided to give up on Nature Club. Instead I concentrated on my other club — Drama. It isn't the most popular club in the camp and most of the members are girls, but that's fine with me. Our director, Jasper Willoughby, is a retired actor and a real enthusiast. He always finds something interesting for us to do. One day he arranges master acting classes, the next day we get singing rehearsals. He also tells us a lot about the world of actors and playwrights, theatre and music. When he found out that I come from Russia, he was delighted. He turned out to be a big fan of Russian theatre. He told us that even at the time of the Cold Wai lie used to come to Moscow just to see a new performance at the Taganka Theatre or to listen to an opera at the Bolshoi Theatre.
He talked about so many playwrights, actors and directors, and even ballet dancers, all of whose names I hardly recognized. I knew who Visotsky, Lyubimov, Bulgakov, Dyagilev and Vishnevskaya were. But who Marius Petipas, Vasiliy Kachalov, Evgeniy Vakhtangov, Galina Ulanova were, I had no idea. I never expected to learn so much about Russian theatre in America. But Jasper was sad because he had been so busy lately that he hadn't had time to fly to Moscow and catch any of the latest premieres. So I wasn't surprised when he asked me to make a report on a play or a musical I had seen recently.
1. Which club did Lisa give up on?
2. Which club did Lisa decide to concentrate on?
3. Who is the director of Lisa's new club?
4. What did Jasper's job use to be?
5. What did Jasper use to do at the time of the Cold War?
6. What made Jasper sad?
14 July Camp Pineland
All of these problems with David and Daniel were getting on my nerves so much that I decided to give up on Nature Club. Instead I concentrated on my other club — Drama. It isn't the most popular club in the camp and most of the members are girls, but that's fine with me. Our director, Jasper Willoughby, is a retired actor and a real enthusiast. He always finds something interesting for us to do. One day he arranges master acting classes, the next day we get singing rehearsals. He also tells us a lot about the world of actors and playwrights, theatre and music. When he found out that I come from Russia, he was delighted. He turned out to be a big fan of Russian theatre. He told us that even at the time of the Cold Wai lie used to come to Moscow just to see a new performance at the Taganka Theatre or to listen to an opera at the Bolshoi Theatre.
He talked about so many playwrights, actors and directors, and even ballet dancers, all of whose names I hardly recognized. I knew who Visotsky, Lyubimov, Bulgakov, Dyagilev and Vishnevskaya were. But who Marius Petipas, Vasiliy Kachalov, Evgeniy Vakhtangov, Galina Ulanova were, I had no idea. I never expected to learn so much about Russian theatre in America. But Jasper was sad because he had been so busy lately that he hadn't had time to fly to Moscow and catch any of the latest premieres. So I wasn't surprised when he asked me to make a report on a play or a musical I had seen recently.