"No Sex Please, We're British" -- Brian Runnicles -- 1983
"A Christmas Carol" -- the Ghost of Jacob Marley -- 1983
"My Fair Lady" -- Jamie -- 1983
"Destry Rides Again" -- Stagecoach Driver -- 1982
"Carousel" -- Jigger Craigin -- 1981
"The Last Meeting Of The Knights Of The White Magnolia" -- Olin Potts --
1981
(Best Supporting Actor Award at the D.C. Recreation Department's
Annual Theatrical Tournament -- 1982.)
"The King And I" -- The Kralahome -- 1980
"Bus Stop" -- Dr. Gerald Lyman -- 1979
"Ah, Wilderness" -- David McComber -- 1978
"Ten Little Indians" -- Judge Wargrave -- 1976
"1776" -- John Adams -- 1976 (Bi-Centennial, summer-long musical show
staged at PTP Theater and at numerous other locations in the National
Capital Area, including County Fairs and Revolutionary War Days
celebration on the Potomac River near Mount Vernon.)
"The Mousetrap" -- Giles Ralston -- 1975
"J.B." -- Mr. Nickles -- 1974
"School For Scandal" -- Joseph Surface -- 1973
"Play It Again, Sam" -- Dick Christie -- 1973
"South Pacific" -- Lt. Joseph Cable -- 1972 (First show with PTP)

Past-President of the Port Tobacco Players and Member of the PTP Board
of Directors.

ACTING (with the Mount Vernon Players, Washington, D.C.)
"The Case Of The Crushed Petunias" -- The Young Man -- 1967
"Arsenic And Old Lace" -- Officer O'Hara -- 1966
"The Apollo Of Belloc" -- The Chairman of the Board -- 1966
"The Lark" -- The Inquisitor -- 1965
"The Great Sebastians" -- Sgt. Javorsky -- 1965
"The Madwoman Of Chaillot" -- Pierre -- 1964
"Time Limit" -- Col. Kim -- 1962
"The Glass Menagerie" -- The Gentleman Caller -- 1962
"The Crucible" -- Judge Hawthorne -- 1962
"Romeo And Juliet" -- Tybalt -- 1961
"Ten Little Indians" -- Capt. Lombard -- 1961
"Joan Of Lorraine" -- La Hire -- 1960

Historical Note: The long-established Mount Vernon Players became, in the
spring of 1950, the "parent group" of Washington, D.C.'s famous
Arena Stage,
when Zelda Fichandler and a few other young actors left MVP to lease the old
Hippodrome roller-skating rink across Mount Vernon Square (just down the
street from the Ford's Theater, where Lincoln was assassinated) and started the
Arena Stage.  The rest is history.  The Arena Stage (on the Potomac Riverfront)
is now one of the top regional theaters in the country, and is the venue where a
lot of now-famous stage and film actors got their start.  Carvajal, a teenager at
the time, was by coincidence among the opening-night audience for Zelda's
very first production at the Hippodrome: "She Stoops To Conquer."  Years
later, Carvajal would be among the guests at the black-tie, grand opening of the
new Arena Stage on the Potomac, where the main speaker was famous New
York City drama critic
Brooks Atkinson.
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