Port Washington Play Troupe

Port Washington Play Troupe is New York State's oldest continuously performing amateur theater organization.[1] Based in the hamlet of Port Washington, the group was founded in 1927.[2]

History

According to a historical summary prepared in 2003 for the Port Washington Public Library Local History Center, the Play Troupe had its beginnings in 1927 and gave its first public performance of 3 one-act plays — Green Chartreuse, The Fog, and The Roadhouse in Arden on January 28, 1928 at St. Stephen's Episcopal Church Parish Hall. The group's first President was Percy Shawcross.

Starting in 1930, the group sponsored a series of plays for children with proceeds donated to a local charity, the Village Welfare Society, for the benefit of the unemployed. The children's shows were revived in 1990 and continued until 1994, when they were once again discontinued.

The Play Troupe was formally incorporated on November 8, 1952 and the following year began publishing its newsletter, Spotlight. The newsletter was published regularly until 1991 with only sporadic publication after that time.

The company's first musical production, A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court was performed in 1956. Their children's show Jack and the Beanstalk produced the following year was featured on Voice of America and the U.S. Information Service as an example of community cooperation.

From 1972 to 1982, the troupe ran a summer theater program for local teenagers. Alumni from the program formed an associated troupe, the Harbor Theater Company, which mounted productions from 1984 to 1995; in the latter year, it took its production of The Emperor’s Tales on tour in Great Britain.

The Play Troupe was honored by the Port Washington Chamber of Commerce in 1979 with a plaque commemorating 50 years of service.[2] It stopped mounting productions after 1995 but maintained its incorporation, and became active again in the 2010's.

The archives and records of the Port Washington Play Troupe covering the first 75 years of its existence are deposited in the Port Washington Public Library Local History Center. They were contributed by the troupe and by many individual members. The collection includes photographs, correspondence, clippings, programs, flyers and other materials pertaining to the organization and its productions and activities, including the Harbor Theater Company.[2]

Golden Era of Radio

In 2014 the troupe undertook a series of productions] to commemorate the period in American history when radio was the dominant mass medium and the principal source of popular entertainment for millions of people.[3]

In partnership with the community public radio station WCWP (88.1 FM) in Brookville, New York, operated by Long Island University, the troupe recreated six classic radio dramas with music, sound effects and period songs, which were performed before an audience in the university's Hillwood Recital Hall and either broadcast live or recorded for later broadcast.

Each of the six plays in the series is based on the screenplay for a popular film, adapted for radio. Such adaptations were common in the 1940s, and when first broadcast, often featured film stars reprising their roles. The six radio dramas in the series were adapted from The Maltese Falcon, The Thin Man, Casablanca, The Philadelphia Story, War of the Worlds, and It's a Wonderful Life.

In addition to the six radio plays, the troupe produced a full theatrical staging of the musical play The 1940's Radio Hour, about the behind-the-scenes antics at a small radio station before, during and after a live broadcast of a variety show. (The Harbor Theater Company mounted a production of the same play in 1991.)

References

  1. New York State Library (1982). The Bookmark, Vol. 41, p. 107
  2. 1 2 3 Port Washington Public Library (2003). Guide to the Records of the Play Troupe of Port Washington. Inc.. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
  3. Port Washington Play Troupe. Celebrating the Golden Era of Radio. Retrieved 10 December 2014

External links

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