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Draft:Lighthouse Festival (theatre festival)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lighthouse Festival
Company typeLive Theatre
Founded1980
Number of locations
Port Dover, Ontario,

Port Colborne, Ontario,

Simcoe, Ontario
Websitelighthousetheatre.com

Lighthouse Festival is a Canadian professional theatre festival in Port Dover, Ontario, Canada, established in 1980. It features Canadian comedies, musicals, and dramas. The festival also hosts community and young company productions, as well as guest events throughout the year. Lighthouse also manages additional theatre spaces, including Roselawn Theatre in Port Colborne and Simcoe Little Theatre in Simcoe.[1][2][3][4]

History

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In 1904, the Port Dover Village Council, led by Reeve James Ross, began building the Town Hall at Main and Market Streets. The three-story structure featured ground-level stores and a 300-seat auditorium with council chambers above. For decades, it served as the town's social, business, and community hub.

The first show by local artists on the Town Hall stage was a musical that opened on February 1, 1905. In the years following, audiences enjoyed a variety of performances, including soap shows, cure-all hucksters, professional troupes like Uncle Tom’s Cabin and The Marks Brothers Bell Ringers, and locally produced musicals and plays.

Lidney H. McQueen likely produced the first professional stage play at the Town Hall in the winter of 1908.

By 1958, with the rise of television, movies, and accessible travel, many small Vaudeville theatres, including The Town Hall (later Lighthouse Theatre), saw a decline. During the late 1950s through the 1970s, the old Town Hall was reduced to a storage space for the municipality and fell into disrepair, largely ignored.

In the late 1970s, Sara Staysa, Artistic Director of the Carpet Bag Theatre Company in Brantford, sought a facility for the company and turned to the old Town Hall in Port Dover. After securing $160,000 from the City of Nanticoke for reconstruction, community members worked tirelessly to complete the renovations. On June 18, 1980, the theatre reopened, with volunteers still painting the balcony and handrails an hour before the first performance.

After extensive renovations, The Vaudevillians, Gypsy, The Last of the Red Hot Lovers, and Private Lives were the first productions on the new stage. Though the theatre faced a deficit, it proved the potential of the venue. The group incorporated as Lighthouse Festival Theatre in 1981 to avoid confusion with the Brantford company. Since then, it has produced summer shows annually, except for the 2020 and 2021 seasons due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][6][7][8]

Showboat Theatre/Roselawn Theatre

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In 2012, Lighthouse Festival was invited to collaborate with Showboat Festival Theatre in Port Colborne, part of the Roselawn Centre for the Arts and managed by the City of Port Colborne. Artistic Director Derek Ritschel extended Lighthouse’s summer season from Port Dover to Port Colborne, with productions premiering in Port Dover before traveling to Port Colborne. By 2015, both theatres saw record subscriptions, and Showboat’s summer season expanded from four to eight weeks. In 2020, Showboat Theatre was renamed Roselawn Theatre.

In 2021, Lighthouse Festival and the City of Port Colborne reached a new agreement, granting Lighthouse complete theatre management, including the ability to offer live performances year-round.

Simcoe Little Theatre

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In 2021, Lighthouse Festival and Simcoe Little Theatre partnered to ensure the future of the community-run theatre. Lighthouse Festival started managing the building, overseeing facility upkeep, administration, technical effects, and artistic guidance. Simcoe Little Theatre continues to select productions as a volunteer-run organization.

Today

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Lighthouse Festival develops and produces new and existing Canadian plays, striving for artistic excellence while supporting local and regional artists. It presents five summer productions each year, including several world premieres and a season finale.

The festival offers live theatre rooted in humor and empathy, focusing on distinctly Canadian stories. It showcases established and emerging artists on stages in Port Dover, Port Colborne, and Simcoe Little Theatre. Through play development, Lighthouse contributes original works by Canadian playwrights to the cultural landscape. Its arts and youth programs engage the community and inspire the next generation of artists, technicians, donors, and patrons.[4]

Artistic Directors

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  • Sara Staysa (1980 – 1981)
  • Greg Brown (1981 – 1984)
  • Sandy MacDonald (1984 – 1986)
  • Simon Johnston (1987 – 1994)
  • Robert More (1994 – 2003)
  • Simon Joynes (2003 – 2004)
  • Chris McHarge (2004 – 2010)
  • Derek Ritschel (2010 – 2024)
  • Jane Spence (2024 – present)

References

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  1. ^ Team, Postmedia (2024-02-07). "Lighthouse Festival presents The Producers as 2024 community show". Simcoe Reformer. Retrieved 2024-11-21.
  2. ^ Team, Reformer (2022-12-06). "Lighthouse Festival Theatre to stage three world premieres in 2023". Simcoe Reformer. Retrieved 2024-11-21.
  3. ^ Thompson, Brian (2023-03-13). "Change to playbill at Lighthouse Festival Theatre". Simcoe Reformer. Retrieved 2024-11-21.
  4. ^ a b Ruby, Michelle (2024-08-12). "Lighthouse Young Company delivers Pinocchio -- with a twist". Simcoe Reformer. Retrieved 2024-11-21.
  5. ^ "Summer theatre returns this week". Port Dover Maple Leaf. 2024-05-23. Retrieved 2024-11-21.
  6. ^ Team, Reformer staff (2024-07-11). "Roles changing at Port Dover's Lighthouse Festival". Simcoe Reformer. Retrieved 2024-11-21.
  7. ^ Leader, Nick Fearns Port Colborne (2022-03-24). "Lighthouse Festival has five shows planned for 2022 summer season at the Roselawn theatre in Port Colborne". NiagaraThisWeek.com. Retrieved 2024-11-21.
  8. ^ "Lighthouse Festival kicks off another season of laughs". The Haldimand Press. 2022-05-26. Retrieved 2024-11-21.