Delaware Children's Theatre Explained

New Century Club
Coordinates:39.7517°N -75.5561°W
Area:Cool Springs neighborhood
Built:1893
Architect:Minerva Parker Nicholas
Added:1983-06-16
Refnum:83001336[1]

The Delaware Children's Theatre (DCT) is a community theatre in Wilmington, Delaware, United States. The theatre company occupies the historic New Century Club building.

Theatre company

Originally named the Children's Repertory Theatre of Wilmington, the organization began in 1973 with their first production of Pinocchio.[2] The organization relies on volunteers for all acting and nearly all support positions as a community theater. To cover operating expenses, DCT sells tickets and receives state support through the Delaware Division of the Arts.[3]

Tony Award winner John Gallagher, Jr. initially played Tom Sawyer as a child actor at the theatre before going on to Broadway.[4] [5]

New Century Club

The Theatre occupies the historic New Century Club building. The organization constructed the building in 1893 and occupied it until 1975. The Delaware Dinner Theatre and Delaware Ballet Company then used the building until 1982 when DCT moved in.[6]

Minerva Parker Nichols of Philadelphia, an early female architect, designed the Colonial Revival building with Palladian windows and a gambrel roof. While serving partly as a clubhouse, it also held a theatre which was used for traveling shows as well as civic speakers, including future president Woodrow Wilson and birth control advocate Margaret Sanger.[7]

The structure is listed as on the National Register of Historic Places and recognized as being an active place for the women's rights movement.[8] The New Century Club was a progressive upper class women's group dedicated to social improvement and charity as well as women's suffrage.[9] Notable members of the Club included Emily P. Bissell, a Red Cross campaigner against tuberculosis who has a state hospital named after her, and Emalea Pusey Warner, who successfully campaigned for public vocational education and has a local elementary school named in her honor.[10] [11] Other New Century women's clubs formed nearby in Milford and Newark, Delaware, as well as in Kennett Square, West Chester, and Chester, Pennsylvania.[12] [13]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: New Century Club. 1983-06-16. National Park Service. 2010-01-31.
  2. Web site: History. Delaware Children's Theatre. 2010-02-01. https://web.archive.org/web/20100426064324/http://www.dechildrenstheatre.org/aboutdct/history.html. 2010-04-26. dead.
  3. Web site: Delaware Division of the Arts Grant Awards: FY2010. 2010. Delaware Division of the Arts. 2010-02-01.
  4. Web site: Leaving the nest for 'Birdie'. Ruston. Muriel. 2009-09-29. The News Journal. 2010-02-01.
  5. Web site: John Gallagher, Jr.. Film Bug. 2010-02-01.
  6. Web site: [{{NRHP url|id=83001336}} National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination Form]. Briggs. Robert. January 1983. National Park Service. 2010-01-31.
  7. Web site: New Century Club Celebrates Sixty-Fifth Anniversary. Ruston. Muriel. 1954-01-24. Wilmington Sunday Star. 2010-01-31. Section 3, Page 7.
  8. Web site: Properties Associated with the Women's Rights Movement. National Park Service. 2010-01-31. page 72.
  9. Web site: Women's Clubs as Educative Agencies: Wilmington, Delaware New Century Club, 1889-1920. Taggart. Robert. 2006. American Educational History Journal. 2010-01-31.
  10. Web site: Emily P. Bissell Hospital (EPBH). Delaware Division of Public Health. 2010-01-31.
  11. Web site: About Warner. Red Clay Consolidated School District. 2010-01-31.
  12. Web site: Archive of the New Century Club of Newark, Delaware. Wellner. Anita A.. 1893–1996. University of Delaware Library. 2010-01-31.
  13. Web site: New Century Club. Bullock. John A.. July 1942. Old Chester. 2010-01-31.