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In 1952 a group of five couples
attended a play presented by a local women’s club and
afterward went out for drinks. They discussed the play they had just seen and
all agreed that they could do better. Thus, they decided to start their own playhouse. These founding members were
Gwen Barndt, Harry and Marge Schaffer, Ben
& Mickie Beltz, Ed & Pearl Herb, Otto & Kay Koch, Harold
& Sue Norman, Al & Mina Hasson, Rita Pearce, Erik Van Anglen and Peg West.
The couples spread the word and to their surprise, 30 people showed up at the first meeting. |
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To house their group, they found an empty auction building next door to the Ridge Road Hotel. The
auction building had been used for square dancing at one time and had a six inch high stage. It also
had a ceiling that dropped to six feet at the stone wall in back with a door located in the center of
the wall. The group rented the building for five dollars per year.
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The first play produced on the DCP stage was a comedy titled Apple of His Eye. Set design and blocking
was made difficult by the physical limitations of the building, as all sets had to have a center back door and all actors
over six feet tall had to be blocked down stage. The congregation of Huff’s Church heard of the group and invited
them to present the play at their church off Route 100. To the actors’ disappointment, no one laughed at the comedy.
At intermission the cast and crew were provided with coffee and donuts. After the show the DCP group discovered the
audience only spoke Pennsylvania Dutch and was even more surprised when they received a bill for the coffee
and donuts. The story later appeared in the Philadelphia Inquirer.
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from our 3rd season, May 24, 25, 31, June 1, 1954. | |
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Things went well until March 1956. At that time the playhouse was heated by a gas space heater suspended from
the ceiling. The membership made their first big purchase by buying an oil furnace. The underwriter checked the
furnace the first Wednesday of the month and furnace company was to turn it on the next day. But being the first
Wednesday of the month, it was also the DCP membership meeting night, so the owner lit the space heater
around five o’clock to heat the building for the gathering. A delayed ignition caused an explosion and the building
burned to the ground.
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Time Out For Ginger by Ronald Alexander Aug. 2, 3, 9, and 10, 1957 |
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Shortly thereafter, an agreement was reached with the owners to rebuild the theater. DCP paid the insurance on
building and contents giving the players equity, right of first refusal, and a 15 year lease starting at $150 a year
(later renewed). Taking no chances, the property owners instructed the builders to make the floors strong enough
so that if the group did not stay he could rent it out as a machine shop. No bathrooms were put in the building with
the hope that patrons would use the hotel bathrooms and buy a beer while they were there.
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from our 3rd season, 1954. |
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DCP produced their first original play, Trout Season, in 1962 and many more followed. The first musical was
By Hex in 1965.
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Note the hotel/restaurant and playhouse as they looked 50 years ago. |
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Last updated - September 20, 2009 |