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It all started with an old hole in the ground discovered on the
301-acre site of the Colonial Williamsburg living museum in Virginia.
And then another hole, and another.
Their spacing at eight-foot
intervals was the first clue that these could be the remains of
a building of some sort. There had been a public theater on the
site, long ago lost to time. Was this it?
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Odai
Johnson.Photo by Kathy Sauber. |
Around the time of this
discovery, Odai Johnson—UW associate professor
in the School of
Drama, author, and a historian well-versed in the colonial American
theater—came into the picture. He was nearby, doing research
at the Virginia Historical Society in Richmond.
“The curator knew
someone down in Williamsburg and heard there was a dig under way
looking for this theater,” says Johnson, who has published
two books on the theaters of colonial America. “He let them
know they had a theater scholar in residence.”
The story since then
is one of sparse clues leading to the hope of restoring a splendid,
centuries-old theater to performing life.
It was known that there
had been a theater somewhere at Colonial Williamsburg in the mid-1700s,
run by an impresario named David Douglass, who managed his own theatrical
company and owned as many as 16 theaters from Rhode Island to Barbados.
Such a performing house may have been located across from the historic
Blue Bell Tavern on the Williamsburg site, where 148 other buildings
had already been restored to historic accuracy.
But that hunch wasn’t enough to begin excavation. As Johnson
says, “‘Near’ is no place to put a shovel in the
ground.”
The ground provided no
obvious relics of an old theater, such as footlights or stage mechanism.
One of the few discovered hints was residue revealing what had years
before been a nine-inch iron spike. These were used in colonial
times to separate the audience from the stage area, keeping the
actors and scenery safe from encounters with unsatisfied or offended
audience members.
Johnson inspected the site and researched theaters built during
Douglass’s long career. “I was able to offer a composite
picture of what this building may have looked like,” he says.
The holes seemed to
suggest that the building had been about 70 by 44 feet, “but
what sold it for us was a brick dividing line at 30 feet,”
Johnson says. That indicated a 70 by 30-foot playhouse space—the
right size for the time—with another 15 feet or so along one
long side for various dressing rooms and a green room.
Research showed the theater
had been built in a quick eight weeks, and on a sort of generic,
no-frills building plan.
“Theater-going
was not frivolous” at that time, Johnson says. Audiences went
to the theater as much to be seen there as to take in the dramas
offered. “The playhouse helped to bring a genteel culture
to the colonies.”
Even the Founding Fathers
attended the theater for recreation and social mingling. Johnson
discovered that Thomas Jefferson, then a young attorney on his way
up, attended the theater six nights out of seven in one particular
week. Johnson learned this not from Jefferson’s writings but
from his expense books showing his payments for theater tickets.
The next step for this
project? Although the hope is that the theater can one day be restored,
first there must be more research and a set of drawings indicating
“what we think David Douglass’s theater looked like,
inside and out, in great detail,” says Cary Carson, vice president
of Colonial Williamsburg’s research division.
All the digging, speculation,
and research lead to one overarching question, says Johnson: “What
do you do with a great 18th century theater once you open it?”
The hope is that it will
be once again used as a theater. The challenge will be to make it
as historically accurate as possible while also making it comfortable
for modern audiences. Public theater seating in the 18th century
was not spacious—the seats usually comprised a small space
along a nine-inch-wide bench with about a foot of leg room in front.
“It was a different dynamic of theater-going,” Johnson
explains. “You didn’t own your own seat, you were just
there. It was a much more social experience, by force. This was
worse than coach seating [on an airplane]!”
Also, questions of satisfying
audience needs with air conditioning—unknown in the 1700s,
of course—and handicapped access will have to be addressed,
as well as the intricate requirements of the Uniform Building Code.
Johnson has been writing
a book about the Colonial Williamsburg theater project—titled
Absence and Memory on the Colonial American Stage—which is
due out this month, as well as a biography of the professional life
of David Douglass.
While stressing that
restoring the theater is a multimillion dollar project still very
much in the “hoping” phase, Carson says it is his wish
to see a working theater at Colonial Williamsburg to entertain tourists
during the day and other theater-goers in the evening.
So a hole in the ground
in Virginia has led to a fascinating research project about the
18th century that may evolve into a creative place for the 21st
century.
Excerpted
and updated from an article
by Peter Kelley in University Week, April 21, 2005.
[Winter-Spring 2006 - Table of Contents]
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