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The Mountain Play Association (MPA, or Mountain Play) is a 501(c)3 organization responsible for the production of theatrical events at the Sidney B. Cushing Amphitheater (formerly the Mount Tamalpais Mountain Theater) within Mount Tamalpais State Park on Mount Tamalpais in Marin County, California, United States. The stone amphitheater, named for the owner of the railroad company which constructed the Mount Tamalpais Scenic Railway,[1] is at an elevation of 2,000 feet and has 4,000 seats.
Mount Tamalpais Mountain Theater Sidney B. Cushing Memorial Amphitheatre | |
Location | Mount Tamalpais State Park, 3801 Panoramic Hwy., Mill Valley, Marin County, California, United States |
---|---|
Coordinates | 37°54′45″N 122°36′30″W / 37.91258°N 122.60844°W |
Built | 1930s |
Architect | Emerson Knight |
Website | www |
NRHP reference No. | 14001234 |
Added to NRHP | February 2, 2015 |
The organization was founded in 1913, and is a member of Theatre Bay Area and the North Bay Theatre Group. John C. Catlin became the first president of the Mountain Play Association. He financed the first play in the Cushing Memorial Amphitheatre in 1913.[2][3] The Mountain Play presents one musical a year, in May and June. The mission statement of the Mountain Play Association reads, "The Mountain Play Association’s mission is to produce an annual, spectacular, outdoor theatrical experience that nurtures an appreciation of Mt. Tamalpais, involves and strengthens the community, and builds on decades of tradition."
The theater group venue was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on February 2, 2015, for architecture and cultural history.[4]
History
editThe organization was founded in 1913, and is a member of Theatre Bay Area and the North Bay Theatre Group. The venue was named for Sidney B. Cushing, the owner of the railroad company which constructed the Mount Tamalpais Scenic Railway.[1] Prior to the 1930s and the construction of the open air amphitheatre, the audience sat on a bowl-shaped lawn.[5] The venue is located just below the 2,571-foot East Peak.[1]
First performance
editOne of the oldest non-profit theater companies in the area, the Mountain Play staged its first theatrical performances in the natural amphitheater on top of Mt. Tamalpais in Marin County in 1913. The first performance was financed by politician John C. Catlin, the first president of the Mountain Play Association.[3] Congressman William Kent, who owned the land on the mountain where the amphitheater stood, was one of its vice presidents. Garnet Holme served as the theatre director, from 1913 until his death in 1929.[6][7]
The first Mountain Play produced was Abraham and Isaac.[8] Members of the audience hiked the eight miles from Mill Valley, or steamed up the mountain on the Mount Tamalpais and Muir Woods Railway, once billed as the "Crookedest Railroad in the World."[9]
List of performances
editPerformance Dates | Year | Play(s) | Notes[10] |
---|---|---|---|
May 21, 28; June 4, 10, 11, 18 | 2023 | Into the Woods | [11] |
May 22, 29; June 5, 11, 12, 19 | 2022 | Hello, Dolly! | [12][13] |
2021 | No play (theater closed for COVID-19 safety) | [14][7] | |
2020 | |||
Summer | 2019 | Grease | |
May 20, 27, June 3, 9, 10, 17 | 2018 | Mamma Mia | [15] |
Summer | 2017 | Beauty and the Beast, and Hair | [16][17] |
Summer | 2016 | West Side Story | |
Summer | 2015 | Peter Pan | |
Summer | 2014 | South Pacific | |
Summer | 2013 | The Sound of Music (100th anniversary) | [8] |
Summer | 2012 | The Music Man | |
Summer | 2011 | Hairspray | |
Summer | 2010 | Guys and Dolls | [18] |
Summer | 2009 | Man of La Mancha | |
Summer | 2008 | Wizard of Oz | |
Summer | 2007 | Hair | [19] |
Summer | 2006 | Fiddler on the Roof | |
Summer | 2005 | Oklahoma! | |
Summer | 2004 | My Fair Lady | |
Summer | 2003 | Annie | |
Summer | 2002 | Bye Bye Birdie | |
Summer | 2001 | Oliver! | |
Summer | 2000 | A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum | |
Summer | 1999 | West Side Story | |
Summer | 1998 | Hello, Dolly! | |
Summer | 1997 | South Pacific | |
Summer | 1996 | My Fair Lady | |
Summer | 1995 | Guys & Dolls | |
Summer | 1994 | Fiddler on the Roof | |
Summer | 1993 | The Music Man | |
Summer | 1992 | Oklahoma! | |
Summer | 1991 | Wizard of Oz | |
Summer | 1990 | Anything Goes | |
Summer | 1989 | Brigadoon | |
Summer | 1988 | South Pacific | |
Summer | 1987 | King & I (75th Anniversary) | |
Summer | 1986 | Peter Pan | |
Summer | 1985 | The Sound of Music | |
Summer | 1984 | Fiddler on the Roof | |
Summer | 1983 | The Music Man | |
Summer | 1982 | Oklahoma! | |
Summer | 1981 | Annie Get Your Gun & Henry V | |
Summer | 1980 | Carnival | |
Summer | 1979 | Indians | |
Summer | 1978 | Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum | |
Summer | 1977 | Clothes | |
Summer | 1976 | Celebration '76 : American music and dance retrospective | |
Summer | 1975 | Music of America | |
Summer | 1974 | Rough an' Ready | |
Summer | 1973 | Picnic and hike, guest of honor State Senator Peter Behr excerpts from Oklahoma! and Jacques Brel | |
Summer | 1972 | Rough an' Ready | |
Summer | 1971 | Playboy of the Western World | |
Summer | 1970 | Tamalpa | |
Summer | 1969 | The World We Live In | |
Summer | 1968 | Alice Through the Looking Glass | |
Summer | 1967 | Kismet | |
Summer | 1966 | Peer Gynt | |
Summer | 1965 | Rough an' Ready | |
Summer | 1964 | Flamenca | |
Summer | 1963 | Tamalpa | |
Summer | 1962 | Rip of the Mountain | |
Summer | 1961 | Robin Hood | |
Summer | 1960 | Alice in Wonderland | |
Summer | 1959 | The Pied Piper | |
Summer | 1958 | Rough an' Ready | |
Summer | 1957 | Tamalpa | |
Summer | 1956 | The Birds | |
Summer | 1955 | The World We Live In | |
Summer | 1954 | The Tempest | |
Summer | 1953 | Tamalpa | |
Summer | 1952 | Land of Oz | |
Summer | 1951 | A Thousand Years Ago | |
Summer | 1950 | Robin Hood | |
Summer | 1949 | Rough an' Ready | |
Summer | 1948 | If I Were King | |
Summer | 1947 | Alice in Wonderland | |
Summer | 1946 | Tamalpa | |
1945 | No play because the grounds were in use by U.S. Army | [7] | |
1944 | |||
1943 | |||
1942 | |||
Summer | 1941 | A Thousand Years Ago | |
Summer | 1940 | The World We Live In | |
Summer | 1939 | The Valiant Cossack | |
Summer | 1938 | Tamalpa | |
Summer | 1937 | Thunder in Paradise | |
Summer | 1936 | Androcles and the Lion | |
Summer | 1935 | The World We Live In (from Ross Valley Players) | |
Summer | 1934 | The Girl of the Golden West | |
Summer | 1933 | The Daughter of Jorio | |
Summer | 1932 | Rob Roy | |
Summer | 1931 | The Trail of the Padres | |
Summer | 1930 | The Sunken Bell | |
Summer | 1929 | Peer Gynt | |
Summer | 1928 | Flamenca | |
Summer | 1927 | The Gods of the Mountain | |
Summer | 1926 | Rip Van Winkle | |
Summer | 1925 | Drake | |
1924 | No play due to hoof and mouth disease epidemic | [7] | |
Summer | 1923 | Tamalpa | |
Summer | 1922 | The Pied Piper | |
Summer | 1921 | Tamalpa | |
Summer | 1920 | As You Like It | |
Summer | 1919 | Tally-Ho | |
Summer | 1918 | Robin Hood and The Three Kings | [5] |
Summer | 1917 | Jeppe-on-the-Hill | |
Summer | 1916 | William Tell | |
May | 1915 | Rip Van Winkle | [20] |
May | 1914 | Shakuntala | [21] |
Summer | 1913 | Abraham and Isaac | [8] |
Sidney B. Cushing Memorial Amphitheater
editIn 1916, Kent deeded the theater to the MPA. Twenty years later, MPA turned the theater over to the Mount Tamalpais State Park, which then surrounded it. In the 1930s the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) worked to install the massive serpentine stones that now form the 4000-seat Sidney B. Cushing Memorial Amphitheater.[1][22]
In 1930, the Mount Tamalpais and Muir Woods Railway stopped running.[7] It was the site of the KFRC Fantasy Fair and Magic Mountain Music Festival, a historic rock music festival in June 1967.[1]
Since 1977, when Marilyn Smith took over as executive director, the Mountain Play presented Broadway musicals on the mountain.[7] In 2014, they presented South Pacific, from May 18 through June 15. Past productions have included Hairspray, Fiddler on the Roof, and Hair.
In 1980, the Mountain Play introduced sign language interpretation at its May performances on Mt. Tamalpais. In the early 1980s, special accommodations were developed for patrons with wheelchairs, including the grading of a path to the theater and the construction of a shaded wheelchair platform. In 1993, the Mountain Play expanded its 10-year-old programs for the visually impaired to include professional describers who provide simultaneous audio description. Equipment was upgraded in 1997, which enables users to sit anywhere in the theater rather than in a specially designated area.
A "Day on the Mountain" outreach program was introduced in 1993 to introduce low-income/at-risk children both to musical theater and to Mt. Tamalpais. Working with Bay Area social service agencies, the Mountain Play provides tickets and transportation to the show, pre-performance workshops and guided nature hikes on the mountain. Since 1995, the Mountain Play has also presented an annual performance at the Redwoods retirement center in Mill Valley for an audience of elderly patrons who can no longer make it up to the mountain.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d e Liberatore, Paul (April 12, 2008). "Veterans of 75-year-old Civilian Conservation Corps honored at Mountain Theater". Marin Independent Journal. Archived from the original on November 14, 2011.
- ^ Hotelling, Neal (30 Aug 2019). "Mayoral questions included feeding a horse, beer and censorship" (PDF). Carmel Pine Cone. Carmel-by-the-Sea, CA. p. 22. Retrieved 2022-04-27.
- ^ a b "John C. Catlin, Son Of Capital Pioneer, Dies". The Sacramento Bee. Sacramento, CA. July 11, 1951. p. 8 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Mount Tamalpais Mountain Theater". NPGallery, Digital Asset Management System.
- ^ a b "Audience for the sixth Mountain Play, Robin Hood and The Three Kings, Mount Tamalpais, 1918 [photograph]", Calisphere, Marin County Free Library, 1918, retrieved 2024-03-06
- ^ "Mountain Play, down but not out". The Sausalito Historical Society. 2020-05-13. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
- ^ a b c d e f Clinton, Larry (2020-05-26). "Mountain Play, down but not out". Marin Local News. Archived from the original on June 22, 2021. Retrieved March 5, 2024.
- ^ a b c Jones, Chad (May 17, 2013). "Mountain Play reaches 100 in Marin". SFGATE. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
- ^ Wurm, Theodore G.; Graves, Alvin C. (1954). The Crookedest Railroad in the World: California's Mt. Tamalpais & Muir Woods Railroad (1st ed.). Fresno, CA: Academy Library Guild. p. 12.
- ^ "Past Productions".
- ^ "Mountain Play returns with 'Into the Woods'". Marin Independent Journal. May 22, 2023. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
- ^ Hamer, Caitlin (2022-04-22). "Hello, Dolly! Takes the Stage at Mountain Play". Marin Living Magazine. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
- ^ "The Mountain Play Returns With Hello, Dolly!". Mill Valley, CA Patch. Bay Area Living. 2022-05-19. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
- ^ "Wracked With Uncertainty Amidst COVID-19 Lockdown, Mountain Play Cancels 107th Season". Enjoy Mill Valley. March 25, 2020. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
- ^ "Mamma mia, there's some fine dining at the Mountain Play". Marin Independent Journal. May 29, 2018.
- ^ "Full Cast Announced for Mountain Play's production of HAIR In Concert". Mill Valley, CA Patch. Bay Area Living. 2017-03-28. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
- ^ "Mountain Play Presents Beauty & The Best, Hair On Mount Tamalpais". CBS San Francisco. June 6, 2017. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
- ^ "Mountain Play pianist and musical director Chambliss knows it can be freezing or boiling". Marin Independent Journal. May 19, 2010. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
- ^ Harlib, Leslie (2007-06-03). "Flower power flashback: 'Hair' at Mountain Play". East Bay Times. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
- ^ "Joseph McCauley in the role of Rip Van Winkle in the Mountain Play Association's 1915 production on Mount Tamalpais [photograph]", Calisphere, Marin County Free Library, 1915, retrieved 2024-03-06
- ^ "Cast of the 1914 Mountain Play, Shakuntala, at the theater on Mount Tamalpais [photograph]", Calisphere, Marin County Free Library, 1914, retrieved 2024-03-06
- ^ "Mount Tamalpais State Park CCC Features". CA State Parks. Retrieved 2024-03-06.