spacer
spacer

History

Special Events

Holy Cow! BBQ Dinner

Join us for a pre-show dinner on Friday, May 23rd at 6:30 PM. The dinner will take place on the Rep's Spencer Theatre patio and will include dinner and a glass of wine/beer. Only $15!

Tickets to that night's production of The Drawer Boy must be purchased separately.

Company History

Kansas City Repertory Theatre, the premier professional resident theatre company of the Kansas City metropolitan area, is now in its 43rd year.

During this long history, there have been only three artistic leaders. Peter Altman who just retired in July 2007 after his seventh season as producing artistic director. George Keathley was artistic director from 1985-2000, and founder Dr. Patricia McIlrath guided the theatre from 1964 until she retired in 1985.

Appointed chairman of the University of Kansas City (now UMKC) Theatre Department and director of the University Playhouse in 1954, Dr. McIlrath, believing in the importance of exposing theatre students to the rigors and demanding standards of professional theatre, long dreamed of establishing a company that could provide them such opportunities and also give Kansas City a notable stage company of its own. In 1964, she formed the UMKC Summer Repertory Theatre in the same era when many other companies destined to be recognized as leaders of the nationwide not-for-profit resident theatre movement (such as the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, Seattle Repertory Theatre, and the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles) were also springing to life.

That same founding year, 1964, James Costin was appointed the Summer Rep‘s administrative director, creating a partnership that would continue for twenty years.

Professional actors, community players, and members of the UMKC Theatre Department, operating on a shoestring budget, worked together that first season to present the Summer Rep’s two-week fledgling season. Fifteen hundred patrons attended performances of The Corn is Green by Emlyn Williams and Private Lives by Noel Coward.

In 1967, the Rep became affiliated with Actors’ Equity Association, the national union of professional actors. As the theatre continued to develop, Dr. Mac launched an extensive touring program. The growing organization officially took the name “Missouri Repertory Theatre” in 1968, and steadily built an enhanced reputation. Actors and directors of national and international acclaim shared their talents with Kansas City actors and audiences.

Rep audiences were treated to a new level of quality and professionalism when, in 1979, the company moved into Helen F. Spencer Theatre in the newly-constructed UMKC Center for the Performing Arts. That same year marked the not-for-profit incorporation of Missouri Repertory Theatre, henceforth under the guidance of and supported by a volunteer board of civic leaders. The Rep, directed by that board, has now operated independently of UMKC for twenty-seven years; however, it maintains its strong commitment to and a close relationship with the university and its theatre training programs.

Dr. McIlrath retired in 1985 as artistic director after serving the Rep for more than twenty years. It was the end of an era. An extensive search for her successor led to the appointment of George Keathley as the new artistic director. With thirty-five years of experience in acting, directing, and producing, Keathley was able to build on the traditions of the company while introducing new dimensions and programming to the theatre. He introduced Rep audiences to such contemporary writers as Athol Fugard, David Mamet and Peter Schaffer, and continued the classic tradition with Shakespeare, Sophocles and Moliere.  At his retirement in 2000, Keathley had personally directed 49 productions. Costin, who passed away in 2005, also retired in 2000, after completing thirty-six years at the administrative helm of the organization.

A new era for the company began with Peter Altman assuming leadership in 2000 as producing artistic director. Altman came to the Rep after eighteen years as founding producing director of the Huntington Theatre Company in Boston. Under his direction and that of the theatre’s board of directors, led by William C. Nelson, Kansas City Rep today is committed to building on its four-decade tradition, further expanding its audience, upgrading and diversifying its range of artists, extending its repertoire to include more new work and large-scale classics of literature and continuing to raise its standards of production.  The Board of Directors voted in 2004 to rename the company Kansas City Repertory Theatre to reflect better its identity, location and audience and that same year a major refurbishment of Spencer Theatre was completed.  In February 2007, the Rep’s longtime goal of opening a second theatre was attained with the opening of Copaken Stage, a new 315-seat downtown theatre.

Performance History

  • 1964
    • The Corn is Green
    • Private Lives
    • 1965
    • Twelfth Night
    • Tartuffe
    • Candida
    • The Lady's Not for Burning
  • 1966
    • Marat/Sade
    • She Stoops to Conquer
    • Crime on Goat Island
    • Camille
  • 1967
    • The Physicists
    • You Can't Take It with You
    • The Importance of Being Earnest
    • Richard III
  • 1968
    • Oedipus Rex
    • The Miser
    • Aegina
    • Philadelphia, Here I Come!
    • The Glass Menagerie
    • The White House
  • 1969
    • The Father
    • Our Town
    • A Flea In Her Ear
    • Look Back in Anger
    • The Taming of the Shrew
    • J.B.
    • Blithe Spirit
  • 1970
    • The Skin of Our Teeth
    • Harvey
    • Indians
    • Exit the King
    • The Tempest
    • Arms and the Man
    • Spoon River Anthology
  • 1971
    • Measure for Measure
    • The Subject Was Roses
    • The Waltz of the Toreadors
    • The Night Thoreau Spent in Jail
    • The School for Wives
    • An Enemy of the People
    • See How They Run
  • 1972
    • Murder in the Cathedral
    • Cat Among the Pigeons
    • Barefoot in the Park
    • Long Day's Journey into Night
    • The House of Blue Leaves
    • Borstal Boy
    • Angel Street
    • Tartuffe
  • 1973
    • Straight Up
    • Pygmalion
    • One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
    • Othello
    • Hedda Gabler
    • Jabberwock
    • Charley's Aunt
    • The Fourposter
  • 1975
    • Born Yesterday
    • The Cherry Orchard
    • Much Ado about Nothing
    • The Last Meeting of the Knights of the White Magnolia
    • A Streetcar Named Desire
    • Well of the House
    • Dear Liar
    • I Am Black
  • 1976
    • The Rainmaker
    • The Morgan Yard
    • The Drunkard
    • Don Juan of Flatbush
    • The Great White Hope
    • The Heiress
    • Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
    • Once in a Lifetime
  • 1977
    • The Glass Menagerie
    • The Orphans
    • The Misanthrope
    • Old Times
    • Mary Stuart
    • The Hostage
    • The Morning Star
    • Purlie Victorious
    • The Imaginary Invalid
    • All My Sons
  • 1978-79
    • Julius Caesar
    • Light Up the Sky
    • The Shadow Box
    • The Sea Gull
    • Rashomon
    • The Happy Hunter
    • Bus Stop
    • The Little Foxes
  • 1980-81
    • Medea
    • What Every Woman Knows
    • The Learned Ladies
    • Catsplay
    • Lady Audley's Secret
    • Night of the Iguana
    • Wings
    • A Perfect Gentleman
  • 1981-82
    • The Three Sisters
    • Talley's Folly
    • Picnic
    • The Good Person of Szechwan
    • A Christmas Carol
    • The Royal Family
    • Loose Ends
    • Crown of Thorns
    • Macbeth
  • 1982-83
    • Antony and Cleopatra
    • Hay Fever
    • The Magnificent Yankee
    • Terra Nova
    • A Christmas Carol
    • The Innocents
    • Translations
    • The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby
  • 1983-84
    • Sea Marks
    • The Importance of Being Earnest
    • The Dresser
    • The Speckled Band
    • A Christmas Carol
    • Life with Father
    • Retro
    • Trio
    • The Taming of the Shrew
  • 1984-85
    • Strider
    • True West
    • Come Back, Little Sheba
    • Fifteen Strings of Cash
    • A Christmas Carol
    • Romeo and Juliet
    • Crimes of the Heart
    • Masters of the Sea
    • Peter Pan
  • 1985-86
    • Agamemnon
    • Foxfire
    • Side by Side by Sondheim
    • A Christmas Carol
    • Fallen Angels
    • Master Harold.and the Boys
    • Othello
  • 1986-87
    • Brighton Beach Memoirs
    • Equus
    • Fool for Love
    • A Christmas Carol
    • A Class "C" Trial in Yokohama
    • And Miss Reardon Drinks A Little
    • The Glass Menagerie
  • 1987-88
    • Dracula
    • Educating Rita
    • End of the World
    • A Christmas Carol
    • All My Sons
    • The House of Blue Leaves
    • The Curious Adventures of Alice
  • 1988-89
    • The Great Sebastians
    • The Emperor Jones
    • The Immigrant
    • A Christmas Carol
    • Tons of Money
    • The Road to Mecca
    • The Tempest
    • A Midsummer Night's Dream
  • 1989-90
    • Jekyll!
    • Absent Friends
    • Woody Guthrie's American Song
    • Love Letters
    • A Christmas Carol
    • Born Yesterday
    • Of Mice and Men
    • Amadeus
  • 1990-91
    • Our Town
    • A Moon for the Misbegotten
    • A Christmas Carol
    • Billy Bishop Goes to War
    • Fences
    • Richard III
    • The Boys Next Door
  • 1991-92
    • King Lear
    • I'm Not Rappaport
    • A Christmas Carol
    • The Lady from Maxim's Lady Day at
    • Emerson's Bar & Grill
    • A View from the Bridge
    • The Cocktail Hour
  • 1992-93
    • Romeo and Juliet
    • Broadway Bound
    • A Christmas Carol
    • Ma Rainey's Black Bottom
    • Rough Crossing
    • The Death of a Salesman
    • The Fantasticks
    • A Midsummer Night's Dream
  • 1993-94
    • M. Butterfly
    • La Vie, L'Amour: Piaf
    • A Christmas Carol
    • The Foreigner
    • Julius Caesar
    • The Gin Game
    • Whisper in the Mind

 

  • 1994-95
    • Dancing at Lughnasa
    • The Deputy
    • A Christmas Carol
    • If We Are Women
    • The Imaginary Invalid
    • Paul Robeson
    • Treasure Island
  • 1995-96
    • A Delicate Balance
    • A Christmas Carol
    • The Belle of Amherst
    • Almost September
    • Antigone
    • Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
  • 1996-97
    • The Misanthrope
    • A Christmas Carol
    • Oleanna
    • Three Tall Women
    • Oedipus the King
    • All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten
  • 1997-98
    • Blithe Spirit
    • A Christmas Carol
    • Later Life
    • The Comedy of Errors
    • The Gospel at Colonus
    • Les Liaisons Dangereuses
  • 1998-99
    • The Royal Hunt of the Sun
    • A Christmas Carol
    • The Last Night of Ballyhoo
    • The Miracle Worker
    • Laughter on the 23rd Floor
    • WMKS: Where Music Kills Sorrow
    • The Shorts Fest
  • 1999-2000
    • Picasso at the Lapin Agile
    • A Christmas Carol
    • Inherit the Wind
    • Gross Indecency
    • The Sea Gull
    • Master Class
  • 2000-01
    • Major Barbara
    • Sisters Matsumoto
    • A Christmas Carol
    • Machinal
    • Blood Wedding
    • Company
  • 2001-02
    • The Philadelphia Story
    • Morning Star
    • A Christmas Carol
    • The Winter's Tale
    • Work Song: Three Views of Frank Lloyd Wright
    • Joe Turner's Come and Gone
  • 2002-03
    • Incognito
    • Saint Joan
    • A Christmas Carol
    • Guys and Dolls
    • The Triumph of Love
    • Indian Ink
    • 2 Pianos, 4 Hands
  • 2003-04
    • Front Page
    • A Christmas Carol
    • Metamorphoses
    • It Ain't Nothin' But The Blues
    • Liliom
    • Living Out
  • 2004-05
    • Pirates of Penzance
    • A Christmas Carol
    • Two Trains Running
    • Little Women
    • A Young Lady From Rwanda
    • The Voysey Inheritance
    • Carter's Way
  • 2005-06
    • Man and Superman
    • A Christmas Carol
    • Give 'Em Hell, Harry
    • A Raisin in the Sun
    • Hank Williams: Lost Highway
    • The Trip to Bountiful
    • Room Service
  • 2006-07
    • Jitney
    • A Christmas Carol
    • King Lear
    • Love, Janis
    • Sherlock Holmes: The Final Adventure
    • The Syringa Tree
    • Under Midwestern Stars
    • 2 Pianos, 4 Hands
  • 2007-08
    • Bad Dates
    • Doubt
    • A Christmas Carol
    • A John Denver Holiday Concert
    • To Kill a Mockingbird
    • A Marvelous Party
    • Gee's Bend
    • The Drawer Boy