Live Theater Near Me in Randolph
Pickleville Playhouse
2049 South Bear Lake Boulevard, Garden City, UT
About
Live family theatre on the banks of Bear Lake in Garden City, Ut. Pickleville produces two shows each summer season -- our own hilarious brand of musical melodrama along with a traditional Broadway musical comedy. We also offer a delicious dinner!
Utah Festival Opera and Musical Theatre
59 South 100 West, Logan, UT
Utah Festival Opera & Musical Theatre is a five-week summer festival with over 100 events including opera and musical theatre productions, concerts and more!
Heritage Community Theatre
2505 South Highway 89, Brigham City, UT
Our building was built in 1890, and served for nearly 80 years as the Perry Ward of the LDS (Mormon) Church. Although the exterior still looks like a church, the interior houses rehearsal space, scene shops, business office, and a 220-seat auditorium.
In 1969, as the Golden Spike celebrated its 100th anniversary, the Box Elder County centennial committee rallied behind an idea of writing and producing an original script with music that would capture the spirit of railroad fever in Northern Utah of 1869.
Drauca J. Holmes and Lucille Lawson were given the task of researching, creating, and staging the story, which they entitled Gandy Dancers.
Mayor Olaf Zundel, then mayor of Brigham city, was overwhelmed by the favorable response to the production. He asked Holmes to organize a community theatre group for the city's recreation program.
In 1970, the Brigham City Community Theatre was formed. It staged many shows at Box Elder High School and other borrowed stages.
By 1975, the group of volunteers had expanded to the point of needing a permanent home for its productions. A door-to-door campaign was launched to raise down-payment money to purchase the vacant Perry LDS Church building, located south of Brigham City.
In their new 161-seat location, the theatre group was able to grow into an independent, viable non-profit organization, known today as Heritage Community Theatre, Inc.
In 1991, the auditorium was expanded to 220 seats.
"Many community theatre groups do not survive more than four or five years." explained Holmes. "But Heritage Theatre sets a new record with every new production."
David Eccles Conference Center
2415 Washington Boulevard, Ogden, UT
About Us:
The Ogden Eccles Conference Center is comprised of two adjacent facilities: The David Eccles Conference Center and the Historic Peery’s Egyptian Theater. Both are unique in their own rite, but when combined make the ideal venue for any event.
Wedding at OECCThe David Eccles Conference Center, opened in 1997, offers two levels of spacious and flexible gathering space that is perfect for meetings, conventions, tradeshows, and social events for events ranging from 10 to 1,500 attendees.
Located in the heart of downtown Ogden, UT, the conference center is conveniently accessible to hotels, shopping, dining and entertainment venues, all within walking distance to the conference center.
Its magnificent windowed walls create bright daylight-filled hallways while revealing breathtaking mountain views. Combined with the warm color accents that are throughout the building create the impression of walking through Utah’s grand desert landscape and the splendor of the mighty Egypt of ancient times.
We invite you to experience the convenience, quality of service, ambiance and beauty that is the Ogden Eccles Conference Center and let us create the ideal event for your next function.
CenterPoint Legacy Theatre
525 North 400 West, Centerville, UT
Mission Statement:
CenterPoint Legacy Theatre is committed to elevating, educating and entertaining our community through participation in and enjoyment of the performing arts.
We will accomplish this in the following ways:
- Providing a safe environment where creative expression may thrive
- Offering quality entertainment that edifies both artist and audience, alike
- Educating those who wish to explore, develop and share their artistic potential
- Creating opportunities for volunteer community service
- Maintaining community trust through fiscal responsibility and wise management of resources
- Generating a climate of appreciation for the arts in our community
- Promoting social interaction with our entire community
Our guiding principles are:
- Integrity
- Creativity
- Quality
- Respect
- Appreciation
- Improvement
- Volunteerism
Eccles Center For The Performing Arts
1750 Kearns Boulevard, Park City, UT
Mission Statement:
To enrich community by providing innovative experiences that entertain, educate and illuminate.
Egyptian Theatre Company
328 Main Street, Park City, UT
About Us:
Live theatrical performances have long been a centerpiece of Park City culture, even in the rough and tumble days of active mining. In the late 1880's, the impressive sum of $30,000 was raised by subscription to build the ornate Opera House that housed touring companies. On a warm June night in 1898, fire roared from the American Hotel and quickly threatened to consume the town. Despite the assistance of fire companies from as far away as Ogden, most of the town was demolished and the Opera House was gutted.
With the rebirth of Park City as a ski and resort town in the 60's, the Egyptian continued to present live theatre, though old fashioned "meller dramas" were the most consistent fare. In 1978 the buildings architectural integrity was threatened. Preservation of it's distinctive Egyptian feature was achieved in 1981 when the building became home to Park City Performances. Live theatre of all genres began to be presented on the boards of the theatre
The Steiner Egyptian has become a small professional theatre operating under an Actor's Equity Association contract. It is able to function as a state of the art facility while retaining the distinctive flavor of years gone by, much like Park City itself.
Pioneer Theatre Company
300 South 1400 East, Salt Lake City, UT
About Us:
Pioneer Theatre Company offers a wide range of exceptional theatre that explores the breadth of the human experience - challenging the intellect, stirring emotions, igniting imaginations and encouraging conversation.
A Reputation for Quality
Salt Lake's major regional theatre is located appropriately enough at the top of Broadway (300 South) and 1400 East. A fully professional theatre in-residence at the University of Utah, Pioneer Theatre Company produces a seven-play season running from September through May, including a mixture of classics, large-scale musicals and contemporary dramas and comedies. Over the past ten years the theatre has developed a reputation for Broadway-quality productions, including mounting Utah premieres as well as regional theatre premieres.
Notably, Pioneer Theatre Company was the first regional theatre in the country to earn the rights to produce Les Misérables, the closing musical of the 2006-2007 season. Running for a record 82 sold out performances, Les Misérables cemented PTC's reputation as a theatre capable of producing large scale, difficult productions.
Capitol Theatre
50 West 200 South, Salt Lake City, UT
History:
The building began as the Orpheum Theatre, and when completed in 1913 was recognized as an architectural gem featuring some of the "highest standard acts and greatest stars of the stage."
The theatre housed from 1,800 to 2,000 seats and was built at a cost of $250,000. Capitalization of the project came from the Walker Estate in Salt Lake City. G. Albert Lansburgh, a 36-year-old San Francisco architect, with a degree from the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris, designed the building with its tapestry brick, polychrome terra cotta and steel reinforcement. The only other major building in Salt Lake using the new terra cotta material on it exterior was the Hotel Utah. Harmony and high art keynoted the decor described by one newspaperman of the time as, "rich and restful without vulgar or gaudy display." The Orpheum was significant for introducing innovative architectural features in theater construction and the most modern mechanical contrivances of its time to the Intermountain West.
Vaudevillians entertained crowds twice daily; tickets sold for 10 cents, 25 cents, 50 cents and 75 cents (depending on the performance and the type of seat). In 1923, the Ackerman Harris vaudeville chain purchased the theatre. Vaudeville continued to reign as king-of-the-house and movies provided a sideline.
The theatre was again sold in 1927 to Louis Marcus, a much-respected mayor of Salt Lake City and Utah movie pioneer, who paid $300,000 for the theatre. Marcus enlarged the seating capacity to 2,260 and installed the "Wurlitzer" with Alexander Schreiner (the Salt Lake LDS Tabernacle organist) as its spotlighted musician. A sunburst set in the ceiling was fashioned, "from a pattern in the carpet used to cover the floor and staircase used in the Lyon cathedral in southern France."
When the theatre raised its curtain on September 29, 1927, it had a new name. The Orpheum was now Capitol Theatre. The "all-talking" picture was introduced to Capitol Theatre in 1929 when On Trial, a Warner Brothers feature was projected on the screen with a Victaphone bringing the star's voice to the audience.
Capitol Theatre underwent another facelift in 1947. Movies continued to be the main attraction at the theatre with live performances staged as they became available. For instance, Stanley Holloway played in a run of My Fair Lady, Judith Evellyn played in A Streetcar Named Desire, and Frank Fay played in Harvey.
It was December of 1975 when Salt Lake County residents passed an 8.6 million dollar bond to renovate the old Orpheum into a performing arts center as part of the Bicentennial Celebration. On October 18, 1978, the curtain at Capitol Theatre rose again ushering in a new era of performing arts in Salt Lake County.
The Off Broadway Theatre
272 South Main Street, Salt Lake City, UT
About
The Off Broadway Theatre (OBT) is Salt Lake’s downtown hot spot for comedy. We opened in 1994, performing family-friendly parodies, traditional plays, musicals, and live improv comedy shows. We are a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization. Our audiences get a chance to see a unique brand of comedy in both the plays and the improv shows throughout the year.
Mission Statement
The mission of the Off Broadway Theatre is to enrich the Wasatch Front by inspiring laughter, developing talents, and fostering learning through the creative expression of the theatrical arts. We fulfill this mission by:
Presenting family-friendly original parodies, improvisational comedy, and other wholesome entertainment for audiences in our theatre and at local schools, youth organizations, hospitals, etc.;
Providing opportunities for aspiring playwrights, actors, directors, stage technicians, and volunteers to learn and develop their skills—opportunities rarely found elsewhere in Utah theaters;
Teaching acting, speaking, and improvisation classes—important, transferable skills for success and self-esteem—to local youth, both at the theatre and at their schools.
The Grand Theatre
1575 South State Street, Salt Lake City, UT
Our Mission
The Grand Theatre Foundation produces quality community theatre, educational outreach programs and cooperative partnerships to enrich the community through the performing arts and humanities.
History:
Historic South High TheaterSouth High School opened in the fall of 1931 and served the community until its closure in 1988. During that time, the school graduated nearly 35,000 students under the administration of only four principals. The closure was controversial and broke the hearts of many of its former students.
Salt Lake Community College purchased the property from the Salt Lake School District a year later with the intention of using it as a city campus. After another year of renovation, portions of the building were opened as the SLCC South City Campus, retaining part of its former name in recognition of the school’s history. During the renovation, Pat Davis, an employee of SLCC and formerly the Executive Director of Promised Valley Playhouse in Salt Lake City, was brought to the school’s old auditorium. “What a grand theater!” she exclaimed, and the name stuck. The first Grand Theatre performance was “Promised Valley” and was held in the football stadium in 1989, but the first "official" production held in the Grand Theatre auditorium was Camelot featuring Robert Peterson
In 1995, the Theatre introduced a fundraising campaign called "Take a Seat!" The premise was to raise money for new theater seats by asking the community to pay $200 per seat; a brass plaque in that donor’s name would be attached to the armrests. Two little ladies from the South High Class of 1942 approached the SLCC Development Office with a proposal that their class purchase a seat. The only hitch was that they needed a little help to get it done. It wasn’t long before members of the Development Office, with the blessing of College President Frank Budd, were discussing the possibility of helping this group of alumni form an association which would not only benefit the thousands of displaced Cubs but SLCC, as well. That spring, the College hosted a group of notable alumni from the community at a luncheon held on the stage of the Grand Theatre. The idea of an alumni association was proposed and gladly accepted.
One of the goals of the Association states “Work in cooperation with the staff and administration of Salt Lake Community College in the growth and renewal of this great facility”. While there is vested interest in the entire structure, one area of the campus has remained structurally unchanged throughout the building’s history: the Grand Theatre. Once the school auditorium and now a premier community theater, the Grand Theatre not only thrills audiences with its performances, but helps returning South High alumni recall an earlier day.
Hale Centre Theatre
3333 South Decker Lake Drive, Salt Lake City, UT
To deliver world-class live theatre and theatre education opportunities which embrace traditional community values at affordable prices for all to enjoy.
Sandy Amphitheater
1245 East 9400 South, Sandy, UT
About Us:
Opened in 1999 and expanded in 2001, the Amphitheater is located in Sandy, Utah on the northwest corner of 9400 South and 1300 East overlooking the Salt Lake valley. The concert experience at the Sandy Amphitheater is truly unique and one you will not find anywhere else in the area. The view is breathtaking as the sun sets in the west and the moon rises over the Wasatch Mountains to the east. Enclosed by an abundance of natural plant life and accented with water features, the amphitheater beautifully blends in with its surroundings.
The Sandy Amphitheater boasts a capacity of 2,750. 966 theater seats up close to the stage, while the lawn seats about 1,800 with both designated lawn chair and blanket areas. Either way patrons are treated to an intimate concert experience with plenty of room to stretch out and enjoy an evening of music under the stars.
Hale Center Theater Orem
225 West 400 North, Orem, UT
Established in 1990 by Ruth and Nathan Hale, the Hale Center Theater Orem has stood as a pillar of the performing arts in Utah Valley ever since. It is also the main pillar of the Hale Center Foundation for the Arts and Education. Now in their eighth straight year of being voted "Best Live Theater of Utah Valley," HCTO continues to put on over 300 performances of family-friendly comedies and musicals each year.
Vernal Theatre
40 East Main Street, Vernal, UT
LIVE is bringing life to small town Utah and opportunities to an entire community. We hope you will come often to discover the wonders of the Arts.
LIVE to bring us together and give us a place to focus our efforts to bring culture and new opportunities to Vernal. We have already seen this in terms of not only our six-show theatrical season and year-round classes for youth and adults, but also in a rental for performance opportunities for community members and groups coming from outside of Vernal to perform in our space.
Utah Shakespeare Festival
351 West Center Street, Cedar City, UT
Mission:
The Utah Shakespeare Festival is a destination theatre that presents life-affirming classical and contemporary plays and musicals, in rotating repertory, and interactive experiences. All of our work is intended to entertain, educate, and enrich regional and national audiences.
Vision:
The vision of the Utah Shakespeare Festival is to create impactful theatre that reflects and celebrates the emotional complexity of our collective humanity.
Values:
INTEGRITY
We embrace all members of our community with a deep commitment to being fair, trustworthy, and honest.
COMMUNITY
We recognize and respect the diverse and unifying interests and goals of the people we serve including our audiences, artists, donors, staff, and national theatre community. We strive to serve as a good citizen of our university, city, state, and country.
ARTISTRY
We are committed to the highest level of theatrical artistry. We pursue, throughout the organization, talented, dedicated, bold, and creative individuals.
COLLABORATION
Collaboration is the essence of our creative process. This process is the best way to not only truly fulfill our artistic vision but to optimize our work as administrators, technicians, and artisans.
DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION
Our best work is possible when every individual can bring their authentic self to an environment of acceptance and mutual respect. As we attract people with underrepresented voices and value their contributions we amplify our ability to fulfill our mission.
FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
As stewards of a more than fifty-year-old arts institution, we recognize that the creation of great theatrical art is predicated on effective and sensible financial and business practices.
Crescent Moon Theater
150 South 100 East, Kanab, UT
History:
The Crescent Moon Theater was conceived as a "Cowboy Theater" by Paula Zutes in honor and memory of her husband Nick Duncan and was built in the center of Kanab, Utah to serve and enhance the community. Designed by Thebeau Consulting, it was constructed in 2002 and opened in May of 2003. Kanab has long been a center for tourism with its colorful history of western culture and its beautiful scenery and the theater adds to its appeal by offering a venue for western themed entertainment for both tourists and local inhabitants.
Since its opening The Crescent Moon has provided musical entertainment, cowboy poetry, talent shows, theater and dance productions, and film events. The Crescent Moon has hosted, Folk, County and Western and Bluegrass bands such as Brenn Hill, Eric Dodge, The Bar G Wranglers, Latigo and Juniper621. Local talent shows and plays are presented here, as well as The Monday Classic Movie Night and The Kanab Film Society Evening.
Bumbleberry Theatre
897 Zion Park Bolevard, Springdale, UT
Tuacahn Amphitheatre
1100 Tuacahn Drive, Ivins, UT
Mission: Tuacahn center for the arts is a professional non-profit presenting and producing organization that inspires creativity and greatness in the human spirit by providing world class family entertainment and education.
The Electric Theater
68 East Tabernacle, Saint George, UT