Formation | 1980 |
---|---|
Type | Theatre group |
Purpose | Theatre company |
Location |
|
Artistic director(s) | Scott Kinney |
Website | visitjulian |
Julian Theater Company is an American theatre company based in Julian, California, a mountain community, historic district and mining town in San Diego County, California. The company stages live productions to promote arts and entertainment for the community. It was co-founded in 1980 by husband and wife Scott and Debra Kinney and originally known as the Pine Hills Lodge Dinner Theater.
In 1980, Scott Kinney, who had been acting and writing in Los Angeles, traveled to Julian and met Debra Bartlett at the Pine Hills Lodge bar where she worked. He moved to Julian, they married, and they began directing and producing the plays. [1] Earlier, in 1978, Kinney appeared in Douglas Jacobs’ adaptation of A Christmas Carol at the San Diego Repertory Theatre with local actress Karen Johnson, who went on to perform under the name Whoopi Goldberg. [1]
In 1982, the company formally became the Pine Hills Lodge Dinner Theater and staged half a dozen weekend plays a year, drawing actors from around San Diego County. [2]
In June 1988, the company staged the sought-after Southern California premiere of American dramatist Larry Shue’s Broadway hit The Nerd at the Pine Hills Lodge Dinner Theater. [1]
The company has since presented plays at both the Julian High School Little Theater with its 165 seats and the Julian City Hall theater with 120 seats, at times in collaboration with the East County Performing Arts Association. Performances are directed by Scott Kinney and produced by Debra Kinney. [3] Plays have included The Music Man by Meredith Willson, [4] as well as each winter Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol. [5]
Many of the plays' adaptations have been co-written by Scott Kinney, a lifelong thespian who has performed with the San Diego Repertory Theatre and the Old Globe Theatre, [3] and Julian resident Don Winslow, a retired New York Times best-selling crime novelist. [6] [2]
After the 2003 Cedar Fire that killed 14 San Diego County residents plus a firefighter and destroyed 2,232 mountain homes, including the Kinneys' house, the couple took a break from the theater company to rebuild their home. Two years later, they returned with the Julian Theater Company, and to lift community spirits, staged Steel Magnolias about a small town and the friendships between six women. [7]
Following the death of the Kinneys' youngest son, Ian, who ran the stage lights, worked the curtains and acted, they paused the company again, returning in 2016 with A Christmas Carol. [2]
The company, after soliciting locally written play submissions, in 2020 produced its inaugural Playwright Festival with A Day in August by Jonathan Retz. [8]
In 2022, the company assisted the East County Performing Arts Association with the stage production of Spoon River Anthology by Edgar Lee Masters at Julian Town Hall's theater. [9] In the summer of 2023, the Julian Theater Company and East County Performing Arts Association presented The Scarlet Pimpernel, directed and staged by Kinney. [10]
The company produced and directed The Sound of Music in July 2024 at the Julian High School's Little Theater. "One of life’s greatest gifts is to work with young artists just starting their storytelling journey," Kinney told the Julian Journal. "The Sound of Music depends on the budding skills of young actors and singers working in harmony." [11]
The Scarlet Pimpernel is the first novel in a series of historical fiction by Baroness Orczy, published in 1905. It was written after her stage play of the same title enjoyed a long run in London, having opened in Nottingham in 1903.
Julian is a census-designated place (CDP) in San Diego County, California. As of the 2020 census, the population was 1,768, up from 1,502 at the time of the 2010 census.
Larry Howard Shue was an American playwright and actor, best known for writing two oft-performed farces, The Nerd and The Foreigner.
Elizabeth Lee McGovern is an American actress. She has received many awards, including a Screen Actors Guild Award, three Golden Globe Award nominations, and one Academy Award nomination.
Frank Wildhorn is an American composer of both musicals and popular songs. His musical Jekyll & Hyde ran for four years on Broadway. He also wrote the hit song "Where Do Broken Hearts Go" for Whitney Houston.
The American Conservatory Theater (ACT) is a nonprofit theater company in San Francisco, California, United States, that offers both classical and contemporary theater productions. It also has an attached acting school.
The Foreigner is a 1984 two-act comedy by American playwright Larry Shue. The play has become a staple of professional and amateur theatre. The Foreigner has earned two Obie Awards and two Outer Critics Circle Awards as Best New American Play and Best Off-Broadway Production.
Emily Skinner, also known as Emily Scott Skinner, is a Tony-nominated American actress and singer. She has played leading roles in 11 Broadway productions including New York, New York, Prince of Broadway, The Cher Show, Side Show, Jekyll & Hyde, James Joyce's The Dead, The Full Monty, Dinner at Eight, Billy Elliot, as well as the Actor's Fund Broadway concerts of Dreamgirls and The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas. She has sung on concert stages around the world and on numerous recordings.
The culture of San Diego, California is influenced heavily by American and Mexican cultures due to its position as a border town, its large Hispanic population, and its history as part of Spanish America and Mexico. San Diego's longtime association with the U.S. military also contributes to its culture. Present-day culture includes many historical and tourist attractions, a thriving musical and theatrical scene, numerous notable special events, a varied cuisine, and a reputation as one of America's premier centers of craft brewing.
Christine Andreas is an American Broadway actress and singer.
Larry Carpenter is an American theatre and television director and producer. In the theatre, he has worked as an artistic director, associate artistic director, a managing director and general manager in both the New York and Regional arenas. He also works as a theatre director and is known primarily for large projects, working on musicals and classical plays equally. In television, he works as a director for New York daytime dramas. He has served as executive vice president of the Stage Directors and Choreographers Society, the national labor union for professional stage directors and choreographers. He is also a member of the Directors Guild of America PAC.
Richard O'Donnell is an American playwright, composer, lyricist, poet, actor, and stand-up comic. He has worked and lived in New York City and Chicago, where he has written and performed for the stage and television. O'Donnell co-wrote the ASCAP award-winning Off-Broadway musical comedy One & One, and Radio City Music Hall's Manhattan Showboat. He founded the New Age Vaudeville theatre company, the New Variety cabaret, the Black Pearl Cabaret, and St. John's Conservatory Theater. As a stand-up comic, he was the executive producer and host of the Fox, Chicago comedy variety television show R. Rated.
Milwaukee Repertory Theater is a theater company in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Founded as the Fred Miller Theatre Company, the group is housed in the Associated Bank Theater Center, which includes the Quadracci Powerhouse Theater, the Stiemke Studio, and the Stackner Cabaret. Milwaukee Rep produces an annual production of A Christmas Carol at the Pabst Theater. It serves an annual audience of over 200,000 patrons, including over 15,000 subscribers.
Gilles Chiasson is an American producer, director, composer, writer and actor. While he first came to prominence as an actor, particularly in the original cast of the Tony Award and Pulitzer Prize winning RENT, Chiasson went on to work in film and television development, then theater administration and operations, and now works in education. He currently lives in Los Angeles, California, with his wife Sherri Parker Lee and their two sons. He is a theater teacher at a high school in Los Angeles.
William Paul Michals is an American stage actor and baritone singer. He has appeared as Emile de Becque in Rogers and Hammerstein’s SOUTH PACIFIC at Lincoln Center,. He made his Broadway debut as “The Beast” in Disney’s BEAUTY AND THE BEAST, and later returned to play Gaston in the same production. His career continued with roles as Javert in LES MISÉRABLES, Billy Flynn in CHICAGO, Don Quixote in MAN OF LA MANCHA, Harold Hill in THE MUSIC MAN, the title role in PHANTOM OF THE OPERA and SWEENEY TODD: THE DEMON BARBER OF FLEET STREET, and recently appeared as Captain Hook in Leonard Bernstein's PETER PAN. He has received the Anselmo Award, he also earned recognition by Chicago’s “Jeff” and the National STAR awards for his portrayal of Chauvelin in a national tour of THE SCARLET PIMPERNEL. He has played Captain von Trapp in THE SOUND OF MUSIC, and Billy Flynn in Kander & Ebb’s CHICAGO.
Hans Rudolph Bachmann, Jr. is an American theatre and film actor, director, singer and editor of Swiss-German descent. He is best known for his lead roles as Harold Brickman in Beyond the Rising Moon and as Frank McCall in Invader.
The Metropolis Performing Arts Centre is a professional theatre company in Arlington Heights, Illinois, founded in 2000. They often have over 300 performances of more than 40 different productions with over 70,000 patrons each season.
Jacqueline Goldfinger (she/they) is an American playwright and librettist best known for her award winning plays Babel and Bottle Fly. She also wrote the popular textbook, Playwriting with Purpose: A Guide and Workbook for Emerging Writers.
Claudia Page Previn Stasny is an American singer, musician, actress, editor and graphic artist.