Our History

Land Affirmation

Weston Theater Company acknowledges that we do our work on the traditional land of the Abenaki People, who stewarded the earth long before European colonizers arrived in North America. We commit to policies and practices of cultural equity to benefit current and future generations.

Since 1937

During the Great Depression and in the midst of Weston’s long, dark winters when the town was cut off from the villages on the other side of the hills, neighbors came together to put on plays that brought to life stories of the world beyond.

A former church renovated for the town dramatic club by Weston-born architect Raymond Austin, the Weston Playhouse attracted the attention of director Harlan Grant, who launched the theater's first theatre season in the summer of 1937. Owned by the Weston Community Association and rented by the theater company during the summer season, The Playhouse was supported by its community through three war-torn summers in the 1940s, a fire that destroyed the original Greek revival building in 1962, flooding which challenged its replacement a decade later and again in 2011, and the international COVID-19 Pandemic of 2020.

Read the full story here.

 


Celebrating 85 Years

Historical Photos