Business Address:
Riverside Community Players, Inc.
4026 Fourteenth Street
Riverside, California 92501-4003
Tel: (951) 369-1200
Fax: (951) 369-1261
Email address: rcporg@earthlink.net
Please contact the box office for reservations. We cannot
guarantee any ticket requests made via email.
|
| |
| Officers: |
| President | Kathryn Gage |
| Vice President | Carol Fick |
| Secretary | Stacey Claflin |
| Business Manager | John Brinkmann |
|
| |
| Board Members: |
| Director | Sandra Claflin |
| Director | Ted Dyer |
| Director | Carol Fick |
| Director | Kathryn Gage |
| Director | Margret Hogeland |
| Director | Marge Weber |
| Director | Jennifer Lawson |
| Director | Bill Hoag |
| Director | Dona Sisk |
|
| |
|
|
| |
Mission Statement:
To create and perpetuate, through community involvement and expression,
high quality theater accessible to Riverside and surrounding communities,
while providing opportunities for education and fellowship.
|
| |
History:
Our story begins one day in January 1925 when Janet Scott gathered
together a handful of eager amateurs to produce plays under the
sponsorship of the Riverside Women's Club. Such an interest was
shown by actors and audience alike that a move was made toward
independence and a more ambitious program. In September of that
year twenty-seven charter members, led by Janet Scott and James
Coleman Scott, met to elect officers and officially launch our
organization, The Community Players.
Our first productions were presented at the Loring Theater, later
renamed the Golden State. We then moved to the high school for a
few performances until the new Central Junior High School was
completed.
We were resolved to have a home of our own. Our friends and
neighbors in Riverside contributed over four thousand dollars to
purchase the abandoned school building at Twelfth and Almond.
In this remodeled building we opened with the "Queen's Husband",
May 30, 1930.
These were the days of the "Great Depression". An audience was hard
to find, and even the players faltered on occasion, but the doors were
never closed. Janet Scott, our driving force, returned to her career in radio
and left the Inland Empire, it was now up to the younger members to take
up where Janet had left off.
The long awaited "silver lining" revealed itself to us in 1937.
An affiliation with the Riverside Adult Recreation Department provided
a director and students for acting and set construction.
With the start of the war trouble again overshadowed us. By mutual
agreement we severed relations with the schools; our director and
actors went to war; our audience lacking gasoline for travel could not
make it to performances. There were, however, a stalwart few who
remained keeping the doors open and the lights burning.
With peace came prosperity. Productions often played to more than
two thousand people. Then came a new problem.
The School Board, who owned the land on which our building stood,
has a need to build a new Administration Building and wanted the
land for parking spaces.
It was 1950 and we were homeless again. The Players accepted an
invitation from the City Recreation Department to move with them to a
small theater in the old School Administration Building at Ninth and
Lemon known as the "Playbox". After two years we found ourselves,
once again, moving out to make room for more parking spaces.
After a season on the stage at Riverside Community College, the Players again
investigated the possibility of building our own theater. The "intimate"
or "circle" theater was becoming popular, and it could be built for
much less than a traditional proscenium stage theater.
Through the sale of Patron Memberships, along with funds already in
the kitty, we were able to complete our new Playhouse in September
1953. Since that time we have added the Green room, the Dressing room,
the "Lewis" (Props) room, and the Patio.
|
|
|