American National Theater and Academy

The American National Theatre and Academy (ANTA) is a non-profit theatre producer and training organization that was established in 1935 to be the official United States national theatre that would be an alternative to the for-profit Broadway houses of the day.

The ANTA, which by law was to be self-sustaining, sponsored touring companies of numerous shows to foreign countries in the post-World War II in the 1940s and 1950s, owned the ANTA Theatre on Broadway, played an important role in the establishment of the Vivian Beaumont Theater in Lincoln Center, was the main membership organization for regional theatre in the U.S. before ultimately having a greatly diminished role in the 1980s. Today as an entity its main focus is the National Theatre Conservatory at the Denver Center for the Performing Arts.

History

It was established by Congress in 1935[1] at the same time as the Federal Theatre Project. Its mission was to set up a theatre for the whole country. It sponsored architectural contests[2] to build the theatre but its mission was overshadowed by the controversy enveloping the Federal Theatre which some considered too liberal.[3]

The group holds a congressional charter under Title 36 of the United States Code.

After World War II, it reorganized and initially sponsored U.S. shows that toured abroad.[3]

In 1950 it bought the Guild Theatre, a Broadway theater, and renamed it the ANTA Playhouse.[4] President Harry S. Truman dedicated the rechristened theatre.[5] The ANTA, under chairman Robert W. Dowling, announced plans to use the theatre bring regional theatre productions into New York City.

In 1955, under the leadership of Richard Aldrich, Warren Caro, and John Shubert, the ANTA announced the "Forty Theatre Circuit Plan" involving the 40 largest regional theatres across the country stating the "ANTA's primary task is to bring the best plays, interpreted by the best actors, at minimum cost to the nation." Plans called for construction of new theatres across the country and touring companies.[6]

However ANTA had problems raising funds for the project and regional theatres objected as they had no formal representation on the ANTA board. In fact the board consisted largely of New York City theatre owners.[7]

In the early 1960s it established the ANTA Washington Square Theatre as the home for the home of the planned theatre company that was to occupy the Vivian Beaumont Theater. ANTA was to produce its most successful plays there including Man of La Mancha as well as Arthur Miller's plays After the Fall and Incident At Vichy.

ANTA leased its Broadway house for commercial productions in the 1970s and sold it in 1981.

In 1965 the League of Resident Theatres was founded to represent the regional theatres.[8]

In 1984, the ANTA started the National Theatre Conservatory in Denver, Colorado.

References

  1. ^ National Theatre Is Authorized By Congress to Advance the Drama - New York Times - June 30, 1935
  2. ^ 600 ARCHITECTS VIE FOR THEATRE AWARD - New York Times - December 31, 1938
  3. ^ a b Bordman, Gerald Martin (1984). The Oxford companion to American theatre. New York Oxford: Oxford university press. pp. 23–24, 249. ISBN 978-0-19-503443-1.
  4. ^ A.N.T.A. TAKES TITLE TO GUILD THEATRE; TO AID OUT-OF-TOWN GROUPS - New York Times - April 1, 1950
  5. ^ TRUMAN ENDORSES ANTA STAGE PLANS; AT DEDICATION OF PERMANENT HOME - New York Times - April 25, 1951
  6. ^ Joseph Wesley Zeigler (1973). "Regional Theatre: The Revolutionary Stage". University of Minnesota Press. p. 126. ISBN 9781452911427.
  7. ^ Regional theatre: The revolutionary stage by Joseph Wesley Zeigler University of Minnesota Press (1973) ISBN 0-8166-0675-7
  8. ^ The History of North American Theater: The United States, Canada, and Mexico : From Pre-Columbian Times to the Present (The history of world theater) by Felicia Hardison Londré and Daniel J. Watermeier - Continuum (April 2000) ISBN 0-8264-1233-5]