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Barn theatre

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sewell Barn Theatre, Norwich, England

A barn theatre is a barn refitted to stage plays. There is a long tradition in Europe dating back to at least the 19th century, and barn theatres are still common in England and the United States.[1] They were common in the United States during the 1930s as summer stock theater.[2][3]

In June 1947 The Billboard wrote that about 200 barn theatres were recorded in the United States for that summer season.[4]

As of the 21st century two barn theaters in Michigan claim to be two of the oldest in the nation: Red Barn in Saugatuck and The Barn Theatre in Augusta.[5]

While commonly summer barn theatres staged popular plays, some of them presented works of new dramatists and new Broadway try-outs.[6][4]

William Birk, author of a book about the historical Rabbit Run Theatre in Madison, Ohio, wrote that one of the reasons to move to barn theatres in the summers of the 1940s was the lack of air conditioning in big city theatres, including on Broadway.[7]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ The Five Continents of Theatre. Facts and Legends about the Material Culture of the Actor ISBN 9789004392939, Chapter One: When, p. 58
  2. ^ "The Shape of Things to Come"
  3. ^ "Broadway Takes to Barns in the Summer", Middletown Times Herald, June 19, 1937
  4. ^ a b "Stick Thick with 200 Barns", The Billboard, June 21, 1947 p.46
  5. ^ Bill Semion, WITH SUMMER COMES THEATER TIME, Chicago Tribune, April 15, 2000
  6. ^ Andrew Craig Morrison, Theaters, 2008, ISBN 0393731081, p. 328
  7. ^ Jennifer Boresz Engelking, 'Hidden History of Lake County, Ohio, 2021, ISBN 1467144584, p. 157

Further reading

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