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Historic photo of the interior of The Pasadena Playhouse. Photo courtesy of The Pasadena Playhouse. |
The Pasadena Playhouse
Website:
The Pasadena Playhouse
The Treasure:
During the first half of the 20th century, The Pasadena Playhouse was the
center of live theater in southern California ,
offering a training ground for Hollywood actors and an alternative
entertainment for the Pasadena
community. Completed in 1925, The Pasadena Playhouse is a Spanish Colonial
Revival building representative of the work of Los Angeles architect Elmer Grey.
Accessibility:
Check their website and schedule a play into your Tour America’s Treasures itinerary! In addition, you can request a
tour of the historic theater to get the backstage story.
Gilmor Brown, founder of the Pasadena Playhouse. Photo courtesy of The Pasadena Playhouse. |
Background:
The history of The Pasadena Playhouse is inextricably tied to the tireless
achievements of its ambitious founder, Gilmor Brown. Born in North Dakota
sometime around 1880, Brown studied theatrical arts in Chicago, toured with
several companies as an actor, and then recruited friends and family into his
own repertory company. Known as the Savory Players, they settled in Pasadena in 1917.
Down the road from Pasadena , Hollywood ’s film industry
was still in its infancy but growing fast. There was a hunger for a live
theater scene and Brown’s troupe was swiftly embraced as an important
community asset. Brown established the Community Playhouse Association of
Pasadena, presenting performances wherever he could, most frequently in the
Savoy Theater, a renovated burlesque house. By 1924, his troupe was established
enough to be able to raise local support to build The Pasadena Playhouse.
Gilmor Brown was a restless innovator during the 1920s. His
main large playhouse was technically sophisticated on a par with the best in
the east and could accommodate up to five staging areas. He experimented with
theater-in-the-round techniques with his special Fairoaks Playbox theatre. And
he managed a College
of Theatre Arts within The Playhouse, training theater actors and polishing the talents of would-be
film stars. Impressed by this busy theater community, playwright George Bernard
Shaw dubbed Pasadena “the Athens of the West.” Shortly after The Pasadena Playhouse achieved the notable distinction of being
the first American theater to present the full Shakespearean canon, the California legislature recognized
the importance of its work by declaring it the official State
Theatre in 1937.
The 686-seat theater nurtured the careers of many up-and-coming
stars over the years. Some of the notable names include: Dana Andrews, Raymond
Burr, Robert Preston, Ruth Buzzi, Jamie Farr, Charles Bronson, Gene Hackman,
Victor Jory, Victor Mature, Lloyd Nolan, Tyrone Power, George Reeves, Randolph
Scott, Sally Struthers, Harry Dean Stanton, Gloria Stuart, Robert Taylor, Gig
Young, Robert Young, Dustin Hoffman, and Gene Hackman.
Historic photo of actors relaxing on The Pasadena Playhouse patio. Photo courtesy of The Pasadena Playhouse. |
Historic photo of stagehands painting the fire curtain at The Pasadena Playhouse. Photo courtesy of The Pasadena Playhouse. |
Notes from the
Editor: In the late 1920s, Randolph Scott was bumming around in Hollywood , getting occasional bit parts in
movies. Cecil B. DeMille told him to get some acting experience at The Pasadena
Playhouse. Scott followed his advice, learned his craft, and went on to became
a major cowboy star, concluding his career with Sam Peckinpah’s magnificent Ride the High Country in 1962.
After graduating from high school, Robert Preston studied
acting at The Pasadena Playhouse in the late 1930s. Preston was a mid-level
Hollywood actor for many years, but his career really took off on the Broadway
stage when he landed the role of a lifetime, “Professor” Harold Hill in The Music Man.
A 20-year-old Raymond Burr arrived at The Pasadena Playhouse
in 1937 and learned his trade there. For many years, he worked as a dependable
supporting actor in Hollywood movies before
hitting iconic stardom as TV’s Perry Mason.
Dustin Hoffman dropped out of Santa Monica College
in 1957 to join The Pasadena Playhouse. There he met Gene Hackman. Both had
major careers ahead of them.
For each of them and many more, The Pasadena Playhouse was
where it all began.
Other Recommended
Sites: The Pasadena Playhouse was in the forefront when television first
rocked the entertainment industry. The Playhouse built and operated one of Southern California ’s first TV stations, KTTV. For more
television and movie history, Burbank and Universal City are just a few miles further west
on Ventura Freeway. In the Burbank
area, you can visit NBC Studios, Sony Pictures Studio, Warner Brothers Studio,
and Universal Studios. Watch for stars. They work here.
Historic photo of the 1924 groundbreaking for The Pasadena Playhouse. Photo courtesy of The Pasadena Playhouse. |
Tour America's History Itinerary
Monday’s destination: Campo de Cahuenga
Wednesday’s destination: San Diego Museum of Man
© 2012 Lee Price
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