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Chester Theatre Company (CTC) is a professional summer theatre company in Chester, Massachusetts. CTC performances take place in the Chester Town Hall, which seat approximately 130 guests. CTC also operates several community-based educational programs in Western Massachusetts.
CTC has earned a reputation for producing "some of the most adventurous programming in the area," according to a 2018 article in The New Yorker.[1]
CTC was founded in 1990 by Vincent Dowling[2] and H. Newman Marsh as the "Miniature Theatre of Chester."
From 1997 to 2015, Byam Stevens served as artistic director of CTC. Stevens led CTC through a lack of outside funding due to the Great Recession. He helped CTC transition from the Chester Miniature Theatre Company to a company focused on contemporary theater. "(Theatre) should address the lasting questions of life, and it should serve as a forum for us to address the important issues that are facing us as a society in the present."[3]
In 2015, Daniel Elihu Kramee became the artistic director of CTC . Kramer has been focusing on language-driven pieces with small casts, Under Kramer, CTC has been working to expand the internship program.
In 2019, Tara Franklin became the Director of Education. CTC has created and run a number of education and outreach programs.
CTC is known for a range of post-show discussions[4] following the majority of its performances. These conversations are an essential part of CTC's education programs.
CTC brings audience members on theatre tours to London,[5] and to North American locations, including Chicago, Washington, DC, and Toronto and Stratford, Ontario,.[6]
Starting in 2005, CTC paired with Gateway Regional Middle School in Huntington, Massachusetts, to help young people write a produce their own work.
CTC produces a series of ten-minute plays written by the students, complete with professional designers, directors, and actors. They also helped teach the students during an 8-week after-school writing course and weekend retreat.[7]
The Camp Shepard Project was a similar collaboration between CTC, Westfield State College, and the Westfield YMCA. Westfield State College provided actors and designers, while directors from CTC acted as mentors to the young writers. The program was designed for students in 6-8th grade. The course took place at the Westfield YMCA.[8]