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The company produces and presents a full season of theatre and arts education programming, performing to approximately 150,000 patrons annually. [1] Founded in 1966 by Susan Douglas Rubeš, [2] YPT originally operated out of the now-demolished Colonnade Theatre on Bloor Street. Since its 1977–78 season, the company has resided in a renovated ...
Young Playwrights' Theater (YPT) is a not-for-profit theater arts-based education organization in Northwest Washington, D.C. It provides interactive in-school and after-school programs presenting and discussing student-written work to promote community dialogue and respect for young artists.
Who's Who in the Theatre is a British reference work, first published in 1912 with sixteen new editions from then until its last issue in 1981. The book was a successor to The Green Room Book, of which four editions were published between 1906 and 1909. Both works presented brief biographies of well-known members of the theatrical profession ...
Theatre or theater [a] is a collaborative form of performing art that uses live performers, usually actors or actresses, to present experiences of a real or imagined event before a live audience in a specific place, often a stage.
The National Youth Theatre in Holloway. The world's first youth theatre, [7] the National Youth Theatre was founded in 1956 by Michael Croft and Kenneth Spring. [8] As a member of the English Department, Croft had been responsible for producing a number of school plays at Alleyn's Boys' School. Following his departure, he was approached by a ...
Theatre Record was founded in 1981 [1] by Ian Herbert and has been published fortnightly since January 1981 until January 2019, when it became an online publication. . Previously it was printed and published in England every
Modern Western musical theatre gained prominence during the Victorian era, with key structural elements established by the works of Gilbert and Sullivan in Britain and Harrigan and Hart in America. By the 1920s, theatre styles began to crystallize, granting composers the autonomy to create every song within a play.
Warp!, also spelled Warp, was a trilogy of American science-fiction plays created by the Organic Theatre Company of Chicago Illinois, in 1971 by co-authors Stuart Gordon and Lenny Kleinfeld, the latter under the pseudonym Bury St. Edmund. [1]