In the beginning there were high points (such as attendance by President and Mrs. Truman), and there were lows: the leaky tarpaper roof that required umbrellas to be held over actress Helen Hayes, a stray dog wandering on stage and staring out at the audience, a coiled snake falling from an opening curtain. Even the community itself was ambivalent: "Let us hope," opined the Annals, that the theater "is not the entering wedge to end our serene and rural character." But theater people live daily with rave reviews and flops, and Olney Theatre has moved forward unfazed.
It began in the mid-'30s as an open-air pavilion built for summer stock and dances--an idea of Washington's Steven Cochrane. In 1941, C. Y. Stephens, owner of the High's Dairy chain, joined Cochrane, and they expanded the theater--only to be closed by World War II gas rationing. After the war a New York summer touring group brought big names to the stage, but the productions weren't equal to the luster of the stars. Changing direction, Stephens invited the involvement of Father Gilbert V. Hartke of Catholic University's Drama Department. Olney became a nonprofit training ground for student writers, actors, designers, and technicians, and its steady climb began. |
| When the theater was on summer circuit, fashionable folk streamed from Washington and Baltimore to dine at Clara May Downey's Olney Inn and attend performances such as Helen Hayes in "Alice-Sit-by-the-Fire." The show debuted her daughter Mary MacArthur, above, who Miss Hayes helps prepare for the stage while son Jamie looks on. |
"Broadway-bound Musical Stops Off at Olney," read the headline announcing the 1951 showing of Oscar Hammerstein's "Music in the Air." Here Hammerstein discusses the production with star Lillian Murphy. He personally directed the Olney revival of "Music," which featured his lyrics and music by Jerome Kern. |
| The 1949 season opener "Private Lives," starring Tallulah Bankhead, brought Washingtonians flocking to the Olney Theatre. As the daughter of a former Speaker of the House, Tallulah was considered one of Washington's own. But her late nights and exuberant lifestyle brought about her exile from the actors' residence to a small stone building still standing on Theatre grounds beside Route 108. Here, Tallulah is in dark dress with, from left, Barbara Baxley, Donald Cook, and William Langford. |
This undated Olney playbill contrasts the glamor of the show's leading actress with the rusticity of the theater's setting. Diana (1921-60) was the daughter of the celebrated John Barrymore. President and Mrs. Harry S Truman visited Olney Theatre to see "The Philadelphia Story." |