Great Lakes Theater: 50-Year History

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T h e F i f t y - Y e a r H i s t o r y o f G L T | P a g e |1

The Fifty-Year History of Great Lakes Theater By Margaret Lynch Prologue Fifty years is a long time. Especially the fifty years that measure the distance from 1962 to 2012--from the Beatles to Lady Gaga, from the first transatlantic TV transmission to the iPad, from the Civil Rights Movement to Occupy Wall Street, from the Cold War to the War on Terror. So it’s not just fifty years that Great Lakes Theater marks this year, it’s fifty years against the backdrop of some of the most tumultuous, eventful and quickly changing decades on record. It’s noteworthy that Great Lakes Theater survived these fifty years, but the fact that it has also flourished is a cause for incredible pride and joyous celebration. There are few adults whose close involvement with the theater spanned the entire fifty years and in 2012 could still remember gathering at the Lakewood Civic Auditorium on the evening of July 11, 1962, to launch Great Lakes Shakespeare Festival. Audrey Watts, the theater’s longest serving trustee, was one who could recall fifty years later how the Lakewood High School cafeteria was festooned with banners that evening for a festive dinner catered by a popular Lakewood family restaurant. She could relive the anxiety when the air-conditioning broke down during the dinner but also the mounting excitement when congratulatory messages were read from First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy and former First Lady Mamie Eisenhower and the lights dimmed for Shakespeare’s As You Like It. Much has changed since that long-ago July evening. Great Lakes Shakespeare Festival became Great Lakes Theater Festival and, recently, Great Lakes Theater. The Lakewood Civic Auditorium gave way to the Ohio Theatre in downtown Cleveland, which in turn gave way to the Hanna Theatre, one of the newest jewels in the crown of the Playhouse Square theater district. But the enduring legacy of Great Lakes Theater is a testimony to the aspirations and commitments of countless people—artists, administrators, educators, and community members--who have made contributions large and small to the success of a theater dedicated to the classics that has rooted itself for five decades on the edge of America’s north coast. Many theaters are founded by artists, but Great Lakes Theater was founded by a group of civic leaders. Most of them were citizens of Lakewood, Ohio, a West Side inner-ring suburb of Cleveland. They served on the library and education boards of their community. In the 1950s they built a library, a skating rink, and swimming pools and added a “civic” auditorium to their high school—all to enhance the education and well-being of their children. Once they built the auditorium, the school board set out to find edifying ways to use the space. “During the year, the joint was jumping, but in the summer it was idle,” remembered Dorothy


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