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League of Resident Theatres

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League of Resident Theatres
Formation18 March 1966; 58 years ago (1966-03-18)
TypeTheater association
Location
Official language
English
Websitewww.lort.org Edit this at Wikidata

The League of Resident Theatres (LORT) is a collective bargaining association with over 70 non-profit theatre members in the U.S. LORT members. LORT serves as a way for member resident theaters, also called regional theaters, to bargain collectively on behalf of theater management with Actors' Equity Association, the Stage Directors and Choreographers Society, and United Scenic Artists.[1]

LORT was formed by the largest of regional theatres to combat unions.[2]: 244  Membership is restricted to US theatres considered as "non-profit" by the Internal Revenue Service[3]

History

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The League of Resident Theatres was formally established on 18 March 1966 by Peter Zeisler, managing director of the Minnesota Theatre Company (a.k.a. the Guthrie Theater), Thomas Fichandler, general manager of Arena Stage, and Morris Kaplan, an attorney. Peter Zeisler was appointed the first president, with Thomas Finchandler as vice president and William Bushnell, manager of Baltimore's Center Stage, as secretary. There were 26 member theaters at the organization's founding. Until then resident theater troupes negotiated individual contracts with Equity; most of them used modifications of commercial theater contracts. In some instances the theaters operated under the terms of Equity's new stock contract, however, resident theater managers have long felt burdened by what they call Equity's "one production" type of contract used on Broadway.[4]

List of Current Member Theaters[5]

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Theatre City State
ACT Theatre Seattle WA
Actors Theatre of Louisville Louisville KY
Alabama Shakespeare Festival Montgomery AL
Alley Theatre Houston TX
Alliance Theatre Atlanta GA
American Conservatory Theater San Francisco CA
American Repertory Theater Cambridge MA
Arden Theatre Company Philadelphia PA
Arena Stage Washington DC
Arizona Theatre Company Tucson/Phoenix AZ
Artists Repertory Theatre Portland OR
Asolo Repertory Theatre Sarasota FL
Baltimore Center Stage Baltimore MD
Barter Theatre Abingdon VA
Berkeley Repertory Theatre Berkeley CA
Capital Repertory Theatre Albany NY
Center Theatre Group Los Angeles CA
Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park Cincinnati OH
City Theatre Company Pittsburgh PA
Clarence Brown Theatre Company Knoxville TN
Cleveland Play House Cleveland OH
Court Theatre Chicago IL
Dallas Theater Center Dallas TX
Delaware Theatre Company Wilmington DE
Denver Center Theatre Company Denver CO
Ensemble Theatre Company Santa Barbara CA
Everyman Theatre Baltimore MD
Florida Studio Theatre Sarasota FL
Ford's Theatre Washington DC
Geffen Playhouse Los Angeles CA
George Street Playhouse New Brunswick NJ
Geva Theatre Center Rochester NY
Goodman Theatre Chicago IL
Goodspeed Musicals East Haddam CT
Great Lakes Theater Cleveland OH
Gulfshore Playhouse Naples FL
Guthrie Theater Minneapolis MN
Hartford Stage Hartford CT
Huntington Theatre Company Boston MA
Indiana Repertory Theatre Indianapolis IN
Kansas City Repertory Theatre Kansas City MO
La Jolla Playhouse San Diego CA
Laguna Playhouse Laguna Beach CA
Lincoln Center Theater New York NY
Long Wharf Theatre New Haven CT
Maltz Jupiter Theatre Jupiter FL
Manhattan Theatre Club New York NY
Marin Theatre Mill Valley CA
McCarter Theatre Princeton NJ
Merrimack Repertory Theatre Lowell MA
Milwaukee Repertory Theater Milwaukee WI
Northern Stage White River Junction VT
Northlight Theatre Skokie IL
Pasadena Playhouse Pasadena CA
People's Light Malvern PA
Philadelphia Theatre Company Philadelphia PA
Pittsburgh Public Theater Pittsburgh PA
PlayMakers Repertory Company Chapel Hill NC
Portland Center Stage Portland OR
Portland Stage Company Portland ME
Repertory Theatre of St. Louis St. Louis MO
Round House Theatre Bethesda MD
Roundabout Theatre Company New York NY
Seattle Repertory Theatre Seattle WA
Second Stage Theater New York NY
Shakespeare Theatre Company Washington DC
Signature Theatre Arlington VA
South Coast Repertory Costa Mesa CA
Steppenwolf Theatre Chicago IL
Studio Theatre Washington DC
Syracuse Stage Syracuse NY
The 5th Avenue Theatre Seattle WA
The Old Globe San Diego CA
Theatre for a New Audience Brooklyn NY
TheatreWorks Redwood City CA
Trinity Repertory Company Providence RI
Two River Theater Red Bank NJ
Utah Shakespeare Festival Cedar City UT
Westport Country Playhouse Westport CT
Wilma Theater Philadelphia PA
Yale Repertory Theatre New Haven CT

References

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  1. ^ Baskerville, David; Baskerville, Tim; Baskerville, Timothy; Elton, Serona (14 November 2022). Music Business Handbook and Career Guide. SAGE Publications. ISBN 978-1-0718-5422-8.
  2. ^ Wilmeth, Don B.; Bigsby, Christopher (1998). The Cambridge History of American Theatre. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-66959-7. In response, the largest regional houses formed a collective bargaining alliance, the LORT, to combat the unions. LORT, which represents approximately one-third of regional theatres (including several in New York City) negotiated its first contract in 1966 with Actor's Equity.
  3. ^ Donahue, Tim; Patterson, Jim (4 August 2020). Stage Money: The Business of the Professional Theater. Univ of South Carolina Press. ISBN 978-1-64336-075-1.
  4. ^ Calta, Louis (4 April 1966). "26 Stage Troupes Form League to Bargain With Actors Equity". The New York Times. p. 26. Retrieved 1 November 2024.
  5. ^ "Member Theatres | League of Resident Theatres". lort.org. Retrieved 17 December 2024.
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