The Children's Theatre Company (CTC) is a regional theater established in 1965 in Minneapolis, Minnesota, specializing in plays for families, young audiences and the very young. The theater is the largest theater for multigenerational audiences in the United States and is the recipient of 2003 Tony Award for Outstanding Regional Theatre. The November 2, 2004, edition of Time magazine named the company as the top theater for children in the U.S.[1]
Children’s Theatre Company operates two theatre spaces including the UnitedHealth Group Stage which seats 747 and the mixed-use Cargill Stage which seats up to 300. Architect Michael Graves designed the expansion for the theater in 2003, nearly doubling the production shops and adding the Cargill stage and lobby space.
The programs began operating from space donated in a restaurant before moving to an abandoned fire station donated when the troupe affiliated itself with the social service agency Pillsbury-Waite Settlement House.[3] It is now located next to the Minneapolis Institute of Arts.
John Clark Donahue was fired 1984 after pleading guilty to sexual abuse of three male minor students. Donahue was sentenced to a year in prison and 15 years' probation during which time he was to completely disengage himself from the Children's Theatre Company.
On December 1, 2015, two former students from the 1970s and early 80s filed civil lawsuits against the theater claiming abuse by Donohue and Jason McLean, a former actor. Additional suits were filed under the Minnesota Child Victims Act. which expired in May 2016. Donahue died of cancer in March 2019.
On November 1, 2019, Children's Theatre Company announced the settlement of all 16 lawsuits. Children's Theatre Company's board of directors also approved a contribution to a newly created Survivors Fund in the amount of $500,000 requested by the survivors.
Leadership
The theater was founded by John Clark Donahue along with John Burton Davidson, Shirley Diercks, Martha Pierce Boesing and Beth Leinerson. Jon Cranny served as the theater's second artistic director from 1984[2] until 1997, when Peter C. Brosius became the theater's third artistic director alongside the theater's managing directors: Theresa Eyring (1999–2007), Gabriella Callichio (2007–11), Tim Jennings (2011–15), Kimberly Motes (16-24) and Jill A. Anderson (24-Present). Brosius was the longest serving Artistic Director in the history of Children’s Theatre Company.
In 1998, under Brosius' leadership, the theater established a new play laboratory, which works with leading playwrights, composers, designers, and directors. Over 200 new plays have been developed and the majority have had their world premieres at Children’s Theatre Company.
In 2021, Children’s Theatre Company, Penumbra (Saint Paul, MN), Ma-Yi Theater Company (New York City, NY), Latino Theater Company (Los Angeles, CA), and Native Voices at the Autry (Los Angeles, CA) announced a landmark partnership that received a $1.5 million grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to create Generation Now.[7] The program will commission and develop 16 new plays by Black, Indigenous, Latinx, and Asian American Pacific Islander writers for multigenerational audiences. The output of Generation Now promises to “radically expand the inclusiveness of each theatre, expand the canon of work produced for multigenerational audiences, and create a model of transformative partnership for the theatre field.”
Plays for New Audiences (formerly Plays for Young Audiences) is the script licensing division of Children's Theatre Company that focuses on plays for multigenerational audiences and actors. PNA's catalog features plays and musicals produced, commissioned, and curated by theatres for young audiences including Seattle Children's Theatre, Chicago Children's Theatre, and Imagination Stage, along with pieces commissioned by Children's Theatre Company.[citation needed]
Plays for New Audiences began in July 2004 to provide scripts developed by Seattle Children's Theatre and the Children's Theatre Company to professional and amateur theatres, churches, libraries and schools.[9]
Cookin’ a sizzling entertainment, directed by Seung-Whan Song, produced by PMC Production Co. and Broadway Asia Company
Morris Micklewhite and the Tangerine Dressby Juliany Taveras, based on the book by Christine Baldacchino and Isabelle Malenfant,[12] directed by Heidi Stillman, co-commissioned by Children’s Theatre Company, Chicago Children’s Theatre, and The Rose Theater
Dr. Seuss's How the Grinch Stole Christmas, based on the book How the Grinch Stole Christmas! by Dr. Seuss, book and lyrics by Timothy Mason, music by Mel Marvin, directed by Peter C. Brosius
The Carp Who Would Not Quit and Other Animal Stories by Reiko Ho and the Honolulu Theatre for Youth Ensemble, directed by Reiko Ho [13]
Babble Lab (World Premiere) by company member Autumn Ness, directed by Sarah Agnew
A Year With Frog and Toad, based on the Frog and Toad series by Arnold Lobel, music by Robert Reale, book and lyrics by Willie Reale, directed by Peter C. Brosius originally presented on Broadway by Bob Boyett, Adrianne Lobel, Michael Gardner, Lawrence Horowitz and Roy Furman, originally directed by David Petrarca
See Children’s Theatre Company's production history for previous seasons.
Interview with author Barry Lopez about the adaptation of his book Crow and Weasel for a CTC play, interviewed by Gretchen Wronka, ALL ABOUT KIDS! TV Series #157 (1994)
PBS Newshour segment, “Minneapolis-based Children’s Theatre Company debuts play about race and policing” (2022)
Broadway World, “First Look at Newly Updated Diary of a Wimpy Kid the Musical” (2022)