The Mirror Theater was founded by Sabra Jones in 1983, who was also the Founding Artistic Director. The first program of the theater was the Mirror Repertory Company (MRC). Founding members of the company included Eva Le Gallienne, John Strasberg, and Geraldine Page. Sabra Jones reached out to Ellis Rabb, artistic director of the APA Phoenix Repertory Company, John Houseman of the Mercury Theater, and Eva Le Gallienne of the Civic Repertory Theatre Company. The company was intended to be "an alternating repertory company in the classic sense" of actor-manager leadership,[1] which Rabb, Houseman, and La Gallienne pioneered. Alternating repertory refers to when one company performs a variety of plays in the same season with the same actors, which was formerly a mainstay of theater tradition. This system has been attributed with helping actors grow in their craft through a wide variety of roles.[2] MRC was funded in its inception primarily by philanthropist
Laurance S. Rockefeller, with additional donations from philanthropists and actors such as Paul Newman, Al Pacino, Dustin Hoffman, and others.[3]
First productions
Alice in Wonderland
MRC's founder and artistic director, Sabra Jones, produced Eva Le Gallienne's adaptation of “Alice in Wonderland,” directed by Le Gallienne and co-directed by John Strasberg, with Kate Burton,
daughter of Richard Burton, in the title role as her Broadway debut. This production, recommended to Jones by Le Gallienne, was a staple of the Civic Repertory Company and was intended to initiate the Mirror Theater Ltd. The production was on Broadway at the Virginia Theatre, now the August Wilson, in NYC. Designer Patricia Zipprodt was nominated for a Tony Award and Drama Desk Award for her costume designs on the “Alice in Wonderland” revival.[4] They were exact recreations of the John Tenniel drawings for the original publication of the book Alice in Wonderland. This theme of artistic sensibility to the original art work was also carried through in the sets by famed designer John Lee Beatty. The sets and costumes were called “exquisite” by the New York Times.[5] The production attracted great attention at the time for its financing, which marked the highest budget to that date of $2,000,000.00,[6] but which was also backed by members of “The Four Hundred” who rarely invest in theater productions. Backers included Anthony D. Marshall, Laurance S. Rockefeller, Brooke Astor, and C. Douglas Dillon, among others.[7]
This production also marked the first time that a public television station invested in a show, WNET13,[7] which later produced a version for television as part of PBS’s “Great Performances” series.[8] MRC Founding Producing Artistic Director Sabra Jones brokered this deal and became Creative Consultant for the television production.[9] In the “Great Performances” broadcast, “The White Knight” was played by Richard Burton, father of Kate Burton, the only time the two ever appeared together on film.[10] Others in the televised production were Colleen Dewhurst, Nathan Lane, Željko Ivanek, Maureen Stapleton, and Eve Arden.[9] The “Great Performances” broadcast is still available to view online.
Sabra Jones, in her first production, had the innovative idea of asking WNET-13 for an investment in this production of a literary classic. WNET-13 invested in the production and in return received the production rights for television. This marked the first time that one non profit had invested in a commercial production for the purpose of securing income. As a result, Sabra was named a creative consultant for the film and also was responsible for securing through her star, Kate Burton, the services of Kate's famous father, Richard Burton, to play the White Knight for WNET-13. This was the only time that Kate appeared on film with her father. In the credits for the film, Sabra Jones is thanked for her assistance (along with Laurence Rockefeller, Brooke Astor, and Anthony D. Marshall).
MRC’s first repertory season included productions of Rain by John Colton, Paradise Lost by
Clifford Odets, Inheritors by Susan Glaspell, and The Hasty Heart by John Patrick.[16] By this
time, the company included actors Anthony Hopkins, Maxwell Caulfield, Julie Harris, Juliet Mills, Mason Adams, David Cryer, Matthew Cowles, and Tom Waites, as well as director Austin Pendleton. Company designers were Ron Placzek (scenery), Heidi Hollman (costumes), Mal Sturchio (lighting), and Rob Gorton (sound).[17] The productions were initially presented at a small 70-seat Off-Off-Broadway theater[18] at the Real Stage Acting School[17] on West 46th St. (the building was then owned by the Local One Stage Hands Union). Benedict Nightingale in the New York Times lauded the company in a review entitled “Dramas From the Past that Speak to the Present” and challenged the public by saying “what chance is there for a new repertory with serious pretensions in the theatrical winter of New York today?”[18]
On the strength of Benedict Nightingale's New York Times review, a group of backers moved the MRC off-Broadway to the Theater at St. Peter's Church. Its first repertory season was budgeted at $675,000.00 and was financed primarily by Laurance S. Rockefeller.[18] The New York State Council of the Arts, AT&T, and the CBS Foundation also contributed. Geraldine Page was named Artist-In-Residence.[19] The season garnered critical attention. The company's work on the revival of John Patrick’s The Hasty Heart received praise;[20]Rain, directed by John Strasberg, was noted primary for the leading role of “Sadie Thompson,” played by MRC's Artistic Director Sabra Jones, whom Mel Gussow termed “the only reason to see the production” and who usually played only minor roles in productions.[16]
Jones chose the season's plays,[21] aided by John Strasberg's memories of his father Lee telling him the history of the Group Theater. The first season of repertory was dedicated to The Group and to the Royal Shakespeare Company. For this season, Paul Newman, Dustin Hoffman, and Al Pacino joined the Mirror as Major Donors in response to a matching grant from Laurance S. Rockefeller.[3]
Arts-In-Education, Maine, London, and 1990s productions
After the death of Artist-in-Residence Geraldine Page in 1987 The Mirror Repertory Company continued with a focus on Arts-in-Education, including celebrated Shakespearean productions within the NYC schools. The arts in education program was devised and taught by Co-Artistic Director John Strasberg,[28] and company member Thomas McAteer, under the guidance of Sabra Jones.
In addition, the company established a summer residency program in order to develop new work, train apprentices and mount new work and revivals. The company presented the first American production[29] of Christopher Hampton's Les Liaisons Dangereuse, and Bernard Pomerance's The Elephant Man in Belfast, ME in 1987-88. The productions were directed by Thomas McAteer.[30] The company moved its residency to Bar Harbor, ME in 1989, producing Chekhov's The Seagull, directed by original Group Theater member Robert Lewis[31] starring Glynnis O'Connor, and Edna Ferber and George S. Kaufman's Stage Door, directed by John Strasberg. Sarah Jane Eigerman ran the company's training program. Apprentices from France, Italy, England, Canada, and the United States, came to Belfast and Bar Harbor, where they studied acting, directing, and stage design.[32] The apprentices appeared in a play written and directed by Eigerman called "Being, Nothingness & Shopping). Strasberg and Jones ran a theater school called "The Real Stage"[33] in New York City and Paris. Eigerman, a founding board member of the Mirror, also founded Franco-American Cinema and Theater (FACT) in Paris.
The Mirror also produced the first staging of Lynn Redgrave's Nightingale at the New End Theater.[34] This production was then moved to Music Center in Los Angeles,[35] where The Mirror was credited, and to Hartford, CT[36] where Jeffrey Richards (August Osage County, among many others) picked it up to produce with The Mirror.[37] Eventually, Nightingale was seen at the Manhattan Theater Club.[38] In 1989, MRC also began an apprentice program in Bar Harbor, Maine in conjunction with Unity College. The program was attended by students from France, Italy, England, Canada, and the United States, where they studied acting, directing, and stage design.[32]
Early 2000s
In spring 2005, MRC presented a repertory season at the Arclight Theatre in NYC. The season consisted of Leon Powell's Do Not Go Gentle, based on the life of Dylan Thomas and starring MRC company member Geraint Wyn Davies; Lilia! by Libby Skala about the Oscar-nominated actress Lilia Skala; and Clurman, which chronicled the story of Harold Clurman, founder of the Group Theaterwritten and acted in by MRC company member Ronald Rand (who was also a former student of Clurman's, in addition to being a former student of MRC Artistic Director Sabra Jones).[39]
The Young Mirror Company, the apprentice company of the Mirror Repertory Company, presented the world premiere of Maxwell Anderson's Richard and Anne, which espouses the theory that Richard was a hero, much maligned by Shakespeare's Richard[40] The show received favorable reviews.[41]
The Young Mirror Company of the MRC presented a season in 2006 at the Theater at St. Clement's on W. 46th Street featuring The Contrast by Royall Tyler,[43] which was the first play produced in the United States by an American author in 1789. his was in repertory with a revival of John Spurling's MacRune's Guevara which was pronounced "goofily entertaining thanks in large part to the talented cast".[44] That same year, the Young Mirror also presented "an imaginative take on Shakespeare's Macbeth in the style of Acter Acter"[45] and the Young Mirror No Boundaries Play Festival.[46]
In 2009, MRC produced the off-Broadway revival of The Shanghai Gesture.[47] Starring Golden Globe and Emmy winner Tina Chen, the piece was routinely praised in the press for the fine period costumes and evocative set;[48] it was also noted MRC was reviving a piece of theatrical history rarely seen.[49] This play was given to the Mirror Theater by Geraldine Page, who died before she could play the legendary “Mother Goddam”.
Greensboro Arts Alliance and Residency
The Mirror Theater's summer wing in Greensboro, Vermont was formed in 2005,[34] called the Greensboro Arts Alliance and Residency (GAAR). GAAR mixed professional MRC company members with local community members[50] with the goal to expand cultural opportunities for Vermont's Orleans County.[51]Jim Lowe of The Times Argus said “The Greensboro Arts Alliance and Residency and The Mirror Theater are creating a new arts world in Greensboro, bringing local talent together with seasoned professionals for the greater community”.[52] In 2012, Tony-nominated actress Marla Schaffel became Artist-in-Residence for GAAR, starring first in The Sound of Music.[51] 2013's season included Marla Schaffel as “Marian” in Meredith Willson's The Music Man, directed by Sabra Jones, playing in repertory with Thorton Wilder’s Our Town, directed by GAAR Co-Artistic Director Charles McAteer and Edgar Lee Master’s Spoon River Anthology.[53] 2014’s production of Rodgers and Hammerstein's Carousel was called a “serious and elegant piece of theater”,[54] while Sabra Jones production of The Miracle Worker was named one of the “Best Bets” by the Burlington Free Press.[55] MRC company member and Golden Globe nominee Tina Chen also presented her one-woman show, entitled “Legacy of my Chinese Family".[51] GAAR celebrated their 10th anniversary in 2015 with three productions playing in repertory: Hamlet, directed by Sabra Jones, Tom Stoppard’s Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, directed by Myriam Cyr, and Kiss Me Kate, starring Marla Schaffel and directed by Charles McAteer.[56] The Times Argus of Vermont called Hamlet a “powerful experience…potent and convincing” and wrote the company was “one of Vermont’s important theaters”.[56] The 2015 season also featured a lecture with RSC member and Olivier Award winner Brian Cox, who discussed his experiences performing and teaching Shakespeare.[56] GAAR also presented a children's production of You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown with a cast entirely of children featuring professional costumes, lighting, and set, and directed by Marla Schaffel with choreography by Lily McAteer.[57]
In 2016, GAAR received the appellation of “the most powerful theater in Vermont” by The Times Argus;[58] the season consisted of To Kill a Mockingbird, directed by Sabra Jones, in repertory with Annie Get Your Gun, directed by MRC company member Sean Haberle and starring Marla Schaffel, and Joshua Sobol's Sinners. To Kill a Mockingbird was called “a great story well told” and Annie Get Your Gun was said to be “absolutely delightful… there is nothing like a song and dance musical, and this one was particularly good”.[52]Sinners, directed by Olivier Award winner Brian Cox, was the American premiere of Joshua Sobol’s play. About a woman who is condemned to be stoned to death for her affair, the production was said to be ultimately tender, beautiful, and deeply compelling due to the performances of the cast.[58] In 2016, Brian Cox joined Charles McAteer as Co-Artistic Director of The Mirror Theater, under Sabra Jones as Founding Producing Artistic Director.[59]
SINNERS in Boston
SINNERS in Boston Spring 2017
The GAAR/The Mirror Theater production of Sinners was so highly lauded that it was invited to Boston by the New Rep Theater which had formed a relationship with GAAR through Sabra Jones's initiative. The New Rep Managing Director Harriet Sheets consulted with us in General Management and then invited the GAAR/The Mirror Theater production into a four-way partnership for a Boston production. The partners were Boston University, New Rep Theater, Israeli Rep, and GAAR/The Mirror Theater. The play, Sinners, is by Joshua Sobel, a prominent Israeli playwright far better known in Europe and the Middle East then here, and the production in Boston was a United States Premiere.[60] The show again starred Nicole Ansare and was again directed by Brian Cox, with sets by Ray Recht and lighting by Brian Barnett, with Jeff Davis as Lighting Associate and F. Mitchell Dana as Production Manager. The play opened on March 23 and played to April 2 in the TheaterLab at BU.[61] It received accolades as it did in Vermont, where it was termed “A masterpiece!” by June Cook.
Boston's Art Fuse summed up the political courage of the work: “This sort of bravery has become very rare in American theater. For far too long, artists and administrators have been arrogantly confident that words such as “truth” and “freedom” mean what they have always meant. Our theaters have blinded themselves to the world's most lethal evils, and have looked for every excuse to ignore its victims. This is why the very fact that Sinners is playing anywhere in America matters.” [62]