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Summmer Circle Theatre has had so many origins its hard
to tell when it started and why or where. In 1961, Dr. JohnDietrich,
making good on a promise hed made to Dean Gordon Sabine
and President John Hannah ordered professors Rutledge, Andreasen,
Byers and Eek to set up a summer theatre "like the Stadium
Theatre" at Ohio State.

The Original
Summer Circle Sign - 1961
Under construction in Demostration Hall
The university
donated Demonstration Hall which was one half of the Ice Rink and these
guys recruited a team of students and designed and installed an arena
theatre. The major problem was that Demo Hall was an empty gymnasium
used for indoor ROTC drill and the entire theatre seats, lights, costume
shop, scene shop and lobby had to be installed from the floor boards
up.

Actors Jack
Herr and Bob Winters painting the Dem Hall Marquee
Summer - 1961
They opened
with Blithe Spirit. Giddy with the promise of a new thrust stage
theatre and bored with the arena, in 1964 Rutledge, Andreasen and
Brandon et al converted the stage to a thrust with a permanent
balcony. The excuse was to practice thrust staging. They started with
A Thurber Carnival.
In 1968, determined to upgrade once again, John Baldwin received
a grant from the Wolfram Foundation to pay a full company of
student actors to perform in rotating repertory a different show
every morning for children and a different show every night for adults
so that six plays were being mounted each day for the final three weeks.
They opened with Treasure Island and J.B.
The
First Summer Circle Play - 1961
Director Corliss Phillabaum rehearses Judy Nichols,
Ann Crow, Bud Spangler, Helen Shaw, Kay Ingram
and Ben Hickock in Blithe Spirit
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The following
summer was all comedies and musicals to offset the previous summer of
high brow rep. By April, 1970 Summer Circle as a separate entity within
the new Department of Theatre (created in 1968) was bankrupt and a special
Provosts Summer Subsidy was returned to pay the indebtedness.At
this point, the faculty (still Rutledge and also Geist and
Baldwin) moved Summer Circle into the Kresge Sculpture court
and reasoned thusly (follow closely and catch the foolishness of it):
since wehave no money, well make the plays free; if the plays
are free, the public can always leave; if the audience can leave, we
can do what
ever we please. Is this the way to attract people???
We opened
with Welcome to the Monkey House adapted from the stories of
Kurt Vonnegut and the people came in droves and trampled the
petunias and made the Grounds Department unhappy which led to bleacher
seating from which the audience could not escape let alone walk away
so we had to pick better plays and so on . . BUT there has remained
a residual urge to present the unknown offbeat play ever since 1981,
Grounds
declared they could no longer supply bleachers in a form that would
fit the Kresge Court so we moved to the fold plain of the river bank.
We opendwith Androcles and the Lion and wallowed in the damp
grass and the backstage mud until wiser heads prevailed and we moved
the whole operation to higher ground in 1993 (can you imagine it took
us twelve years to realize it can rain in Michigan in July?) Along the
way (in the swamp) we experimented with two other ideas: we used to
recap the three plays of the season by repeating them in rotating rep
for a fourth week this led to a revolt of therunning crews; and
we tried focusing the plays on American Theatre with accompanying seminars
taught jointly with American Studies. We have also presented new plays.
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There
is one basic premise of Summer Circle which has remained
constant: it is still a student-community town-gown program
utilizing the best available
talents of both communities.
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John
Baldwin
Co-Founder of Summer Circle
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