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Arts Club Theatre Company

The Arts Club Theatre Company is a Canadian professional theatre company in Vancouver, British Columbia, founded in 1958. It is the largest urban not-for-profit theatre company in the country and the largest in Western Canada, with productions taking place at the 650-seat Stanley Industrial Alliance Stage, the 440-seat Granville Island Stage, the 250-seat Newmont Stage at the BMO Theatre Centre, and on tour around the province. The company celebrated its 50th season in 2014 and produced its 600th production in 2017.

Arts Club Theatre Company
LocationBMO Theatre Centre, 162 W 1st Avenue
Vancouver, British Columbia
V5Y 0H6
TypeNon-profit theatre company
CapacityStanley Industrial Alliance Stage: 650
Granville Island Stage: 440
Goldcorp Stage: 250
Opened1958; 65 years ago (1958)
Website
artsclub.com

Major themes from this company are new Canadian works, comedies, musicals, drama, and revues, with an emphasis on developing local and Canadian talent. In addition to theatre presentations, the company offers educational programs and special events.

Since 1972, the company's artistic director was Bill Millerd, who oversaw its expansion for over 45 years. On February 20, 2017, Millerd announced his retirement at the end of the 2017/2018 season.[1] On June 28, 2017, the company announced that Ashlie Corcoran would take over as artistic director for the 2018–2019 season.[2]

History

 
Seymour Street Theatre in 1972

The Arts Club was founded in 1958 originally as a private club for artists, musicians, and actors. In January 1964, Yvonne Firkins, a founding member of the B.C. Drama Association and B.C.'s "First Lady of the Theatre," renamed the club the Arts Club Theatre Company and established a new theatre in a converted gospel hall on Seymour Street in Downtown Vancouver.[3] The first production was Moss Hart's Light Up the Sky.[4] When Bill Millerd took over the company in 1972, it was producing four productions per year, with an annual budget of $150,000, and an audience of 29,000 patrons per year.[1]

Competing with the much larger, Canada Council-created Vancouver Playhouse Theatre Company, the Arts Club became known for programming gritty new plays like David Freeman's Creeps, David Fennario's On the Job, and premieres of Michel Tremblay's plays in translation, as well as Shakespeare plays in the larger Malkin Bowl in Stanley Park. Additionally, the long running Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris cemented the Arts Club's identity in its early years.[5]

The 250-seat Seymour Street Theatre was instrumental in launching the careers of Canadian performers, including Michael J. Fox, Bruce Greenwood, Ruth Nicol, Janet Wright, Winston Rekert, Lally Cadeau, and Brent Carver. Additionally, new works by playwrights like Nicola Cavendish, Morris Panych, Sherman Snukal, Anne Mortifee, and John Lazarus premiered at this theatre.[6]

Just seven years into Millerd's time at the company, the Arts Club expanded to include performances at the 450-seat Granville Island Stage on Granville Island in 1979. Across the street, the smaller 193-seat Revue Stage in 1983.

The 1990s were a time of major transition for the company. In 1991, the Seymour Street Theatre was closed for demolition and is now the site of the Vancouver International Film Centre. Six years later, in 1997, the Revue Stage was leased to the Vancouver TheatreSports League for 13 years, before re-opening as an Arts Club stage in 2010.

In 1998, the Arts Club took over operations at the 650-seat Stanley Theatre (renamed the Stanley Industrial Alliance Stage in 2005), a former movie theater, located on Granville Street, a high traffic area of Vancouver. Now considered the company's main venue, it allowed the Arts Club to produce larger musicals like Les Miserables, Mary Poppins, Beauty and the Beast and Billy Elliot. The purchase and renovation of the new theatre cost nearly $9 million, almost three times the company's annual operating budget at the time. However, in the first season at the Stanley, the company's revenues nearly doubled, taking in more than the rival Vancouver Playhouse for the first time. The following year, company revenue went over $8 million and has not dropped below that point since.[7]

In 2015, the Arts Club closed the Revue Stage and moved all programming to the 250-seat Goldcorp Stage at the BMO Theatre Centre in Olympic Village. A shared space with Bard on the Beach, the BMO Theatre Centre has four large rehearsal studios, wardrobe facilities for both companies, offices, and a state-of-the-art studio theatre space.[8]

By 2016, largely due to Millerd's leadership, the company was producing up to 18 productions per year, had an annual budget of over $16 million, and an audience of over 255,000 patrons per year.[9] On February 20, 2017, Millerd announced his retirement at the end of the 2017/2018 season.[1] On June 28, 2017, the company announced that Ashlie Corcoran would take over as artistic director for the 2018–2019 season.[2]

Leadership

Artistic directors

  • Yvonne Firkins (1964–1966)
  • Bill Millerd (1972–2018)
  • Ashlie Corcoran (2018–Present)

Since 1972, Bill Millerd is the artistic managing director and, as of 2017, is the longest-serving artistic director of a theatre company in Canada.[7] During his time with the company, Millerd has expanded its operations to include year-round programming and regional and national tours. Millerd oversaw the construction of the Granville Island Stage, the Revue Stage, the reopening of the historic Stanley Theatre, and the BMO Theatre Centre. During his tenure, over 600 plays were produced, over 100 of which Millerd has directed himself. Millerd is a governor of the National Theatre School of Canada, has received both a Jessie Richardson Theatre Award for Career Achievement and the Mayor's Arts Award, and is a member of the Order of Canada. He has been awarded an Alumni Award of Distinction and an honorary Doctor of Letters degree from UBC, and was presented with a Lifetime Achievement Award from Tourism Vancouver.[6] On February 20, 2017, Millerd announced his plans to retire at the end of the 2017/2018 season.[1]

Executive directors

  • Howard Jang (2000–2014)
  • Peter Cathie White (2014–Present)

Notable productions

1964–1979

1980–1997

  • Tom Foolery by Tom Lehrer, directed by Geoff Ferris, at the Granville Island Stage (1981).
  • Talking Dirty by Sherman Snukal, the first premiere of a new Canadian play, at the Seymour Street Theatre (1981).
  • A Musical Evening with Ruth Nichol and Leon Bibb, first production at the Revue Stage (1983).
  • Ain't Misbehavin' by Murray Horwitz and Richard Maltby, Jr., ran for two years at the Revue Stage (1984–85).
  • It's Snowing on Saltspring by Nicola Cavendish, premiere, remounted numerous times, at the Seymour Street Theatre (1985).
  • 7 Stories by Morris Panych, world premiere, directed by Panych, at the Granville Island Stage (1989).
  • A Closer Walk with Patsy Cline by Dean Regan, world premiere, at the Revue Stage (1991).
  • The Ends of the Earth by Morris Panych, world premiere, won the Governor General's Award for Drama, at the Granville Island Stage (1992).
  • Mom's the Word by Barbara Pollard, Deborah Williams, Jill Daum, Alison Kelly, Robin Nichol, and Linda A. Carson, toured to Australia and London, at the Revue Stage (1995).
  • Taking Steps by Alan Ayckbourn, with Colin Mochrie as Mark, at Granville Island Stage (1995).

1998–2015

  • Swing by Dean Regan, with Michael Bublé in the cast, the first production at the Stanley Theatre (1998).
  • Girl in the Goldfish Bowl by Morris Panych, world premiere, with Zachary Ansley, won the Governor General's Award for Drama, at the Granville Island Stage (2002).
  • The Matka King by Anosh Irani, world premiere, at the Granville Island Stage (2003).
  • Mom's the Word 2: Unhinged by Barbara Pollard, Deborah Williams, Jill Daum, Alison Kelly, and Robin Nichol, world premiere, at the Granville Island Stage (2005).
  • Glengarry Glen Ross by David Mamet, with Eric McCormack and Brian Markinson, at the Stanley Industrial Alliance Stage (2009).
  • Les Miserables by Claude-Michel Schönberg, highest grossing production ever, at the Stanley Industrial Alliance Stage (2009).
  • Don Quixote by Colin Heath and Peter Anderson, world premiere, co-production with Centaur Theatre Company and Axis Theatre Company, directed by Roy Surette, at the Granville Island Stage (2010).
  • Hairspray by Marc Shaiman, Scott Wittman, Mark O'Donnell, and Thomas Meehan, actor Jay Brazeau suffered a stroke 30 minutes before curtain and was replaced by Andy Toth for 36 performances before Brazeau returned to the production, at the Stanley Industrial Alliance Stage (2011).[10]
  • Do You Want What I Have Got? A Craigslist Cantata by Bill Richardson and Veda Hille, at the Revue Stage (2012).

2015–present

  • Onegin by Veda Hille and Amiel Gladstone, world premiere, winner of a record 10 Jessie Richardson Theatre Awards, at the Goldcorp Stage at the BMO Theatre Centre (2016), on tour across Western Canada, and Granville Island Stage (2017).
  • Angels in America by Tony Kushner, directed by Kim Collier, with Brian Markinson and Gabrielle Rose, at the Stanley Industrial Alliance Stage (2017).
  • The Piano Teacher by Dorothy Dittrich, world premiere, directed by Yvette Nolan, with Megan Leitch as Erin, at the Goldcorp Stage at the BMO Theatre Centre (2017).
  • Thanks for Giving by Kevin Loring, directed by Loring, with Margo Kane as Nan, at the Granville Island Stage (2017).

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Vancouver's Arts Club Theatre 'heart' Bill Millerd to step down as artistic managing director". Vancouver Sun. 2017-02-21. Retrieved 2017-03-21.
  2. ^ a b "Vancouver's Arts Club Theatre Company names Ashlie Corcoran as new director". The Globe and Mail. 2017-06-28. Retrieved 2017-10-13.
  3. ^ "The History of Metropolitan Vancouver - 1964 Chronology". www.vancouverhistory.ca. Retrieved 2017-03-22.
  4. ^ "Vancouver's little theatre company that could". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 2017-03-22.
  5. ^ Wasserman, ,Jerry. "A look back at Bill Millerd's impressive Arts Club career". www.leaderpost.com. Retrieved 2017-03-21.
  6. ^ a b . Arts Club Theatre Company. Archived from the original on 2017-02-03. Retrieved 2017-03-20.
  7. ^ a b . www.joewiebe.com. Archived from the original on 2016-03-23. Retrieved 2017-03-22.
  8. ^ Conner, ,Shawn. "BMO Theatre Centre: A stage for the ages". www.vancouversun.com. Retrieved 2017-03-20.
  9. ^ (PDF). artsclub.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-03-22. Retrieved 2017-03-22.
  10. ^ "Andy Toth to step in for Jay Brazeau in Arts Club's Hairspray". Georgia Straight Vancouver's News & Entertainment Weekly. 2011-05-13. Retrieved 2017-04-05.

External links

  • The Arts Club Theatre Company

arts, club, theatre, company, canadian, professional, theatre, company, vancouver, british, columbia, founded, 1958, largest, urban, profit, theatre, company, country, largest, western, canada, with, productions, taking, place, seat, stanley, industrial, allia. The Arts Club Theatre Company is a Canadian professional theatre company in Vancouver British Columbia founded in 1958 It is the largest urban not for profit theatre company in the country and the largest in Western Canada with productions taking place at the 650 seat Stanley Industrial Alliance Stage the 440 seat Granville Island Stage the 250 seat Newmont Stage at the BMO Theatre Centre and on tour around the province The company celebrated its 50th season in 2014 and produced its 600th production in 2017 Arts Club Theatre CompanyLocationBMO Theatre Centre 162 W 1st AvenueVancouver British ColumbiaV5Y 0H6TypeNon profit theatre companyCapacityStanley Industrial Alliance Stage 650Granville Island Stage 440Goldcorp Stage 250Opened1958 65 years ago 1958 Websiteartsclub wbr comMajor themes from this company are new Canadian works comedies musicals drama and revues with an emphasis on developing local and Canadian talent In addition to theatre presentations the company offers educational programs and special events Since 1972 the company s artistic director was Bill Millerd who oversaw its expansion for over 45 years On February 20 2017 Millerd announced his retirement at the end of the 2017 2018 season 1 On June 28 2017 the company announced that Ashlie Corcoran would take over as artistic director for the 2018 2019 season 2 Contents 1 History 2 Leadership 2 1 Artistic directors 2 2 Executive directors 3 Notable productions 3 1 1964 1979 3 2 1980 1997 3 3 1998 2015 3 4 2015 present 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory Edit Seymour Street Theatre in 1972 The Arts Club was founded in 1958 originally as a private club for artists musicians and actors In January 1964 Yvonne Firkins a founding member of the B C Drama Association and B C s First Lady of the Theatre renamed the club the Arts Club Theatre Company and established a new theatre in a converted gospel hall on Seymour Street in Downtown Vancouver 3 The first production was Moss Hart s Light Up the Sky 4 When Bill Millerd took over the company in 1972 it was producing four productions per year with an annual budget of 150 000 and an audience of 29 000 patrons per year 1 Competing with the much larger Canada Council created Vancouver Playhouse Theatre Company the Arts Club became known for programming gritty new plays like David Freeman s Creeps David Fennario s On the Job and premieres of Michel Tremblay s plays in translation as well as Shakespeare plays in the larger Malkin Bowl in Stanley Park Additionally the long running Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris cemented the Arts Club s identity in its early years 5 The 250 seat Seymour Street Theatre was instrumental in launching the careers of Canadian performers including Michael J Fox Bruce Greenwood Ruth Nicol Janet Wright Winston Rekert Lally Cadeau and Brent Carver Additionally new works by playwrights like Nicola Cavendish Morris Panych Sherman Snukal Anne Mortifee and John Lazarus premiered at this theatre 6 Just seven years into Millerd s time at the company the Arts Club expanded to include performances at the 450 seat Granville Island Stage on Granville Island in 1979 Across the street the smaller 193 seat Revue Stage in 1983 The 1990s were a time of major transition for the company In 1991 the Seymour Street Theatre was closed for demolition and is now the site of the Vancouver International Film Centre Six years later in 1997 the Revue Stage was leased to the Vancouver TheatreSports League for 13 years before re opening as an Arts Club stage in 2010 In 1998 the Arts Club took over operations at the 650 seat Stanley Theatre renamed the Stanley Industrial Alliance Stage in 2005 a former movie theater located on Granville Street a high traffic area of Vancouver Now considered the company s main venue it allowed the Arts Club to produce larger musicals like Les Miserables Mary Poppins Beauty and the Beast and Billy Elliot The purchase and renovation of the new theatre cost nearly 9 million almost three times the company s annual operating budget at the time However in the first season at the Stanley the company s revenues nearly doubled taking in more than the rival Vancouver Playhouse for the first time The following year company revenue went over 8 million and has not dropped below that point since 7 In 2015 the Arts Club closed the Revue Stage and moved all programming to the 250 seat Goldcorp Stage at the BMO Theatre Centre in Olympic Village A shared space with Bard on the Beach the BMO Theatre Centre has four large rehearsal studios wardrobe facilities for both companies offices and a state of the art studio theatre space 8 By 2016 largely due to Millerd s leadership the company was producing up to 18 productions per year had an annual budget of over 16 million and an audience of over 255 000 patrons per year 9 On February 20 2017 Millerd announced his retirement at the end of the 2017 2018 season 1 On June 28 2017 the company announced that Ashlie Corcoran would take over as artistic director for the 2018 2019 season 2 Leadership EditArtistic directors Edit Yvonne Firkins 1964 1966 Bill Millerd 1972 2018 Ashlie Corcoran 2018 Present Since 1972 Bill Millerd is the artistic managing director and as of 2017 is the longest serving artistic director of a theatre company in Canada 7 During his time with the company Millerd has expanded its operations to include year round programming and regional and national tours Millerd oversaw the construction of the Granville Island Stage the Revue Stage the reopening of the historic Stanley Theatre and the BMO Theatre Centre During his tenure over 600 plays were produced over 100 of which Millerd has directed himself Millerd is a governor of the National Theatre School of Canada has received both a Jessie Richardson Theatre Award for Career Achievement and the Mayor s Arts Award and is a member of the Order of Canada He has been awarded an Alumni Award of Distinction and an honorary Doctor of Letters degree from UBC and was presented with a Lifetime Achievement Award from Tourism Vancouver 6 On February 20 2017 Millerd announced his plans to retire at the end of the 2017 2018 season 1 Executive directors Edit Howard Jang 2000 2014 Peter Cathie White 2014 Present Notable productions Edit1964 1979 Edit Light Up the Sky by Moss Hart the first production in the Seymour Street Theatre 1964 Now Mercutio Bill Millerd s first show with the company as a stage manager at the Seymour Street Theatre 1970 Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris first musical produced by the company ran for seven months with Brent Carver in the cast at the Seymour Street Theatre 1972 The Incredible Murder of Cardinal Tosca by Alden Nowlan and Walter Learning premiere first production at the Granville Island Stage 1979 1980 1997 Edit Tom Foolery by Tom Lehrer directed by Geoff Ferris at the Granville Island Stage 1981 Talking Dirty by Sherman Snukal the first premiere of a new Canadian play at the Seymour Street Theatre 1981 A Musical Evening with Ruth Nichol and Leon Bibb first production at the Revue Stage 1983 Ain t Misbehavin by Murray Horwitz and Richard Maltby Jr ran for two years at the Revue Stage 1984 85 It s Snowing on Saltspring by Nicola Cavendish premiere remounted numerous times at the Seymour Street Theatre 1985 7 Stories by Morris Panych world premiere directed by Panych at the Granville Island Stage 1989 A Closer Walk with Patsy Cline by Dean Regan world premiere at the Revue Stage 1991 The Ends of the Earth by Morris Panych world premiere won the Governor General s Award for Drama at the Granville Island Stage 1992 Mom s the Word by Barbara Pollard Deborah Williams Jill Daum Alison Kelly Robin Nichol and Linda A Carson toured to Australia and London at the Revue Stage 1995 Taking Steps by Alan Ayckbourn with Colin Mochrie as Mark at Granville Island Stage 1995 1998 2015 Edit Swing by Dean Regan with Michael Buble in the cast the first production at the Stanley Theatre 1998 Girl in the Goldfish Bowl by Morris Panych world premiere with Zachary Ansley won the Governor General s Award for Drama at the Granville Island Stage 2002 The Matka King by Anosh Irani world premiere at the Granville Island Stage 2003 Mom s the Word 2 Unhinged by Barbara Pollard Deborah Williams Jill Daum Alison Kelly and Robin Nichol world premiere at the Granville Island Stage 2005 Glengarry Glen Ross by David Mamet with Eric McCormack and Brian Markinson at the Stanley Industrial Alliance Stage 2009 Les Miserables by Claude Michel Schonberg highest grossing production ever at the Stanley Industrial Alliance Stage 2009 Don Quixote by Colin Heath and Peter Anderson world premiere co production with Centaur Theatre Company and Axis Theatre Company directed by Roy Surette at the Granville Island Stage 2010 Hairspray by Marc Shaiman Scott Wittman Mark O Donnell and Thomas Meehan actor Jay Brazeau suffered a stroke 30 minutes before curtain and was replaced by Andy Toth for 36 performances before Brazeau returned to the production at the Stanley Industrial Alliance Stage 2011 10 Do You Want What I Have Got A Craigslist Cantata by Bill Richardson and Veda Hille at the Revue Stage 2012 2015 present Edit Onegin by Veda Hille and Amiel Gladstone world premiere winner of a record 10 Jessie Richardson Theatre Awards at the Goldcorp Stage at the BMO Theatre Centre 2016 on tour across Western Canada and Granville Island Stage 2017 Angels in America by Tony Kushner directed by Kim Collier with Brian Markinson and Gabrielle Rose at the Stanley Industrial Alliance Stage 2017 The Piano Teacher by Dorothy Dittrich world premiere directed by Yvette Nolan with Megan Leitch as Erin at the Goldcorp Stage at the BMO Theatre Centre 2017 Thanks for Giving by Kevin Loring directed by Loring with Margo Kane as Nan at the Granville Island Stage 2017 Gallery Edit Granville Island Stage ExteriorSee also EditStanley Industrial Alliance Stage Theatre of Canada Bard on the Beach Vancouver Playhouse Theatre Company Firehall Arts CentreReferences Edit a b c d Vancouver s Arts Club Theatre heart Bill Millerd to step down as artistic managing director Vancouver Sun 2017 02 21 Retrieved 2017 03 21 a b Vancouver s Arts Club Theatre Company names Ashlie Corcoran as new director The Globe and Mail 2017 06 28 Retrieved 2017 10 13 The History of Metropolitan Vancouver 1964 Chronology www vancouverhistory ca Retrieved 2017 03 22 Vancouver s little theatre company that could The Globe and Mail Retrieved 2017 03 22 Wasserman Jerry A look back at Bill Millerd s impressive Arts Club career www leaderpost com Retrieved 2017 03 21 a b Company History Arts Club Theatre Company Arts Club Theatre Company Archived from the original on 2017 02 03 Retrieved 2017 03 20 a b Joe Wiebe Stage Fight www joewiebe com Archived from the original on 2016 03 23 Retrieved 2017 03 22 Conner Shawn BMO Theatre Centre A stage for the ages www vancouversun com Retrieved 2017 03 20 Arts Club Theatre Company Annual Report 2015 2016 PDF artsclub com Archived from the original PDF on 2017 03 22 Retrieved 2017 03 22 Andy Toth to step in for Jay Brazeau in Arts Club s Hairspray Georgia Straight Vancouver s News amp Entertainment Weekly 2011 05 13 Retrieved 2017 04 05 External links EditThe Arts Club Theatre Company Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arts Club Theatre Company amp oldid 1109140640, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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