Winnipesaukee Playhouse

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Address33 Footlight Circle (formerly 50 Reservoir Road)
Meredith, New Hampshire
United States
Coordinates43°38′14″N 71°30′30″W / 43.6372°N 71.5083°W / 43.6372; -71.5083
Capacity200–250
TypeRegional theater
Winnipesaukee Playhouse
New 200+ seat theatre
Interactive map of Winnipesaukee Playhouse
Address33 Footlight Circle (formerly 50 Reservoir Road)
Meredith, New Hampshire
United States
Coordinates43°38′14″N 71°30′30″W / 43.6372°N 71.5083°W / 43.6372; -71.5083
Capacity200–250
TypeRegional theater
Construction
Opened2004;
Relocated 2013
Website
www.winnipesaukeeplayhouse.org

The Winnipesaukee Playhouse is a 200+ seat courtyard-style theater in Meredith, New Hampshire, United States, in the heart of New Hampshire's Lakes Region. The Playhouse produces both a professional summer stock season and a community theater season, and is arguably the only theater in the United States to do so. [1] Between 2006 and 2019 the Winnipesaukee Playhouse received 87 New Hampshire Theater Awards,[2] more than any other theater in the state during this time period,[3] and in 2009 it was selected by New Hampshire Magazine as the best professional theater in New Hampshire.[4] In 2013 the Playhouse moved from Weirs Beach in Laconia to the former Annalee Dolls campus in Meredith. The new theater has 200 seats as well as support spaces such as offices, dressing rooms, and a lobby, which the previous theater did not have.[5]

The Winnipesaukee Playhouse was founded in 2004 by brother and sister Bryan Halperin and Lesley Pankhurst and their spouses, Johanna and Neil. They opened the Playhouse in the Alpenrose Plaza (the former Dexter Shoes outlet plaza) in the village of Weirs Beach in the city of Laconia, New Hampshire. The theater started with a professional summer stock season, and continued with community theater and children's theater during the rest of the year.[5] In 2006 it became a non-profit organization.[6]

In 2008, Hidden Green LLC, investors in the Winnipesaukee Playhouse, purchased the Annalee Dolls factory site for $1.05 million. The Playhouse renovated this property to create a "Tanglewood type of setting" to perform theater and other endeavors in.[7] The theater moved from its previous site in Weirs Beach to the site of Annalee's former gift shop in 2013.

As of 2012, the Winnipesaukee Playhouse had performed 91 plays, 45 of which were professional summer stock, with the rest being community theater or children's theater.[8]

New theater

References

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