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The Little Theatre on the Square
Four Decades of a Small-Town Equity Theatre
1st Edition
Beth Conway Shervey. Foreword by Peter Palmer
$48.00
Cloth
0-8093-2354-0
978-0-8093-2354-8
144 pages, 5.5 x 8.5, 37 Illus.
11/2/2000

About the Book

Beth Conway Shervey examines the cultural consequences of an Equity theatre in a small midwestern farm town. Although many in the Midwest and beyond know the story of The Little Theatre On The Square in Sullivan, Illinois, Shervey is the first to consider what the existence of such a theatre means to perceptions of life in the town. To tell the story of Sullivan and of its star theatre in a cornfield from the perspective of the residents involved, Shervey uses oral history and and dozens of photographs by David W. Mobley, the theatre’s longtime photographer.

           

Sullivan resembles most small towns in the Midwest, and The Little Theatre  differs little from most professional summer stock theatres. Yet taken together, the small town and its theatre are clearly unusual, and the existence of the theatre obviously alters perceptions of life in the small town.

           

Before the theatre opened in 1957, Sullivan decidedly was a product of its time: the town sported a strong local chapter of the WCTU, moral people avoided taverns, liberals and Catholics were the minorities, and the population was predominantly white. While the theatre didn't effect instant change, it did introduce people to Sullivan who were obviously different.

           

Stars such as Betty Grable, Cesar Romero, Margaret Hamilton, and Pat O'Brien came into town. Aspiring actors and those behind the scenes also mingled with the residents of Sullivan. As a result, Shervey finds, Sullivan faced such issues as racism, homophobia, urban liberalism, and alcohol consumption at a much faster rate than similar towns. For some, the theatre disrupted a sense of the normal; for others, the theatre made life in Sullivan different and interesting, breaking the restrictive bonds typically associated with small towns.

           


Authors/Editors

Beth Conway Shervey completed her doctorate in American culture studies from Bowling Green State University in 1998. She spent her early years in Sullivan and worked at The Little Theatre On The Square.


Reviews

"Beth Conway Shervey presents an interesting account of the role and significance of an Equity theatre in a central Illinois farming town. The history of The Little Theatre in Sullivan is sufficiently uncommon, if not unique, to encompass a valuable cultural study of a small midwestern town's reaction to a professional summer stock theatre in their midst and an interesting history of the theatre itself."             —Christian Moe, coeditor of Eight Plays for Youth, Varied Theatrical Experiences for Stage Study and Creating Historical Drama: A Guide for the Community and the Interested Individual  

Awards

Illinois State Historical Society's Certificate of Excellence (2002)

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