- Phone : (419) 332-0695
- Email : Contact@fremontcommunitytheatre.org
More than a Stage in your Life
The Fremont Community Theatre had its genesis in 1956 through a series of circumstances that brought together Robert and Carrie Stageger and Sally Ruland. Led by Bob Staeger, having completed his B.A. degree at B.G.S.U. in dramatics, they made plans to form a private theatre group, if there was enough interest in the community.
A list was compiled of those Fremonters they felt might be interested in producing a play. Contracts were made and a first meeting was scheduled. The Staegers informed the group of their purchase of theatrical lights, for which they had to mortgage their car. It was decided the group would help raise money to produce the first play. Selling advertisements for the playbill was the primary method of obtaining finances, a practice FCT is still dependent upon today.
A 1963 production of Come Back, Little Sheba
With theatre lights, program advertisements, and a deep desire to perform live theatre, the group sought a place to practice and produce their first show. The Fremont Order of Moose, owners of the Old Masonic Temple, offered them a room on the fourth floor, the “Penthouse”. The group began calling themselves “The Fremont Penthouse Players” and chose “Harvey” for their first production, which was produced at the Moose building in a three quarter round before a total audience of 128 persons.
The group considered their first show a success and immediately decided upon a second show. A week prior to this second production, Mayor Collins proclaimed the week of February 10-16, 1957 as Civic Theatre Week.
The third production of the Penthouse Players, the last held in the Moose, marked the departure of two of the Players’ founding members. Its playbill had the following letter from Bob Staeger:
“We are leaving Fremont for what we hope will be great advancement. Our leaving will in no way hamper the growth of the Penthouse Players. The conception, birth, and growth of the organization has been one of the highest chapters in my life, and I shall continue to watch the organization grow, wherever I am.” – Bob Staeger
The cast of the 1977 musical Cabaret
With the loss of the Staegers, the group changed from a private enterprise to a community group with elected officers. They reimbursed the Staegers for the lights and worked toward their second year productions. They sought a larger auditorium and settled on Stamm and Hayes schools for their second season. Having lost the Penthouse, the group chose a new name and formally became the Fremont Community Theatre. For their third and fourth seasons, the group rented the Little Theatre at the newly completed Ross High School
During the fifth season, FCT in conjunction with the American Association of Women, put on the first children’s theatre. A monthly newsletter, the “Spotlight”, was established to keep the ever-expanding membership informed of theatre events. The plays presented that season included FCT’s first musical, “Carousel”. The musical was performed at the Fremont Junior High and was such a resounding success that FCT followed with one major musical in nearly all subsequent seasons.
FCT joined the statewide theatre organization, the Ohio Community Theatre Association (OCTA), of which it has remained a member-in-good-standing to this day. The organization has participated in yearly “workshops” and theatrical competition through the regional and state meets of OCTA.
A 1980 production of Oklahoma
During the sixth season, 1961-1962, the Fremont Community Theatre and Literary Society became incorporated as a non-profit organization, recorded with the Secretary of State of Ohio. Constitutional structure of FCT was changed to incorporate a board of directors, separate from its officers.
By the time FCT finally found its home on Vanguard Place, the group had met in over twenty different places for rehearsals and performances over the fifteen years of its existance. This inconvenient nomadic condition prompted FCT’s members to take three years off from producing live theatre to construct the current theatre building, of which we are extremely proud.
Fremont Teen Theatre was a natural outgrowth of FCT. Started in March 1969, this organization was formed by teens who had been active in FCT’s regular productions, and who were interested in having an outlet for their diverse talents. Over 30 years later Teen Theatre continues to form a vital part of Fremont Community Theatre.
FCT . . . we’ve always been more than a stage in your life.
“Theater is a show that is able to bring the atmosphere of each audience to the deepest recesses of the heart”
Harvey
Mr. Roberts
Death of A Salesman
Happy Time
Solid Gold Cadillac
Twelve Angry People
Born Yesterday
Laura
The Tender Trap
Bell, Book, and Candle
Dial M for Murder
My Three Angels
Blithe Spirit (I)
All My Sons (I)
Carousel (I)
Visit to a Small Planet
Sunrise at Campobello
Kiss Me, Kate (I)
Pleasure of His Company
Come Back, Little Sheba
Brigadoon
Write Me a Murder
The Man Who Came to Dinner (I)
The Music Man (I)
Send Me No Flowers
Inherit the Wind (I)
The Sound of Music (I)
Mary, Mary
The Chalk Garden
My Fair Lady (I)
Never Too Late
The Miracle Worker (I)
Gypsy
Diary of Anne Frank (I)
Seven Year Itch
L’il Abner
Everybody Loves Opal
Take Her, She’s Mine
Do I Hear a Waltz
For Laughin’ Out Loud
Beckett
Anastasia
Roar of the Greasepaint
Halfway up the Tree
Play It Again Sam
Arsenic and Old Lace (I)
You Can’t Take It With You (I)
Prisoner of Second Avenue
Johnny Belinda (I)
Godspell (I)
Secret Affairs of Mildred Wilde
Glass Menagerie
Don’t Drink the Water
Cabaret
The Fantasticks (I)
Wait Until Dark (I)
George Washington Slept Here
The Lion in Winter
Oliver (I)
Butterflies are Free
You’re a Good Man Charlie Brown
Count Dracula
Vanities
Knock-Knock
Fiddler on the Roof (I)
Something’s Afoot (I)
Heaven Can Wait
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
Oklahoma (I)
The Importance of Being Earnest
Silver Bells
The Miracle Worker (II)
Hello, Dolly! (I)
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (I)
Dirty Work at the Crossroads
6 RMS RIV VU
Camelot
The Wizard of Oz (I)
Snoopy
Jesus Christ Superstar
I Do! I Do!
The Sound of Music (II)
Teahouse of the August Moon (II)
Johnny Belinda (II)
Godspell (II)
Man of LaMancha
Annie (I)
Bus Stop
South Pacific
Fools
Mr. Scrooge
On Golden Pond
The King & I (I)
The Odd Couple (I)
Cinderella (I)
Deathtrap
Working
Pippin
All My Sons (II)
The Magic of Christmas
Barefoot in the Park
Carousel (II)
HOME
The Octette Bridge Club
Some Enchanted Evening
The Curious Savage
Guys and Dolls (I)
Only an Orphan Girl
The Crucible
The Chronicles of Narnia
Of Mice and MeKiss
Me, Kate (II)
The Fantasticks (II)
Love, Sex, and the IRS (I)
Mornings at Seven
The Mousetrap
The Music Man (II)
You Can’t Take It With You (II)
Two By Two
A Christmas Carol: Scrooge and Marley
On Borrowed Time
Pirates of Penzance
Move Over Mrs. Markham
Crimes of the Heart
The Homecoming
Squabbles
Annie Get Your Gun
Lend Me a Tenor
Out of Sight, Out of Murder
Nunsense (I)
The Nerd
Oliver (II)
Do Black Patent Leather Shoes Really Reflect Up?
Blithe Spirit (II)
Arsenic and Old Lace (II)
Rumors
Big River
Noises Off
Forever Plaid
Jake’s Women
Run For Your Wife
Fiddler on the Roof (II)
Nunsense II
Inherit the Wind (II)
Greater Tuna
No Room For Love
Damn Yankees!
Schoolhouse Rock Live!
Steel Magnolias
Same Time Next Year
But Why Bump Off Barnaby?
My Fair Lady (II)
The Mystery of Edwin Drood
The Cemetary Club
Moon Over Buffalo
I Hate Hamlet
A Funny Thing Happened
on the Way to the Forum (II)
The Wizard of Oz (II)
The Odd Couple (female)
First Night
Lost in Yonkers
Annie (II)
1940’s Radio Hour
The Farndale Avenue Housing
Estate Townswomen’s Guild
Dramatic Society’s production
of A CHRISTMAS CAROL
Rehersal For Murder
To Kill a Mockingbird
The Sound of Music (III)
Seven Brides for Seven Brothers
Over the River and Through the Woods
Cheaper by the Dozen
Grace & Glorie
The King & I (II)
Hello, Dolly! (II)
The Man Who Came to Dinner (II)
House for Sale
Whose Wives Are They Anyway?
Into the Woods
The Odd Couple (II)
Scrooge!
Dearly Departed
Harvey (II)
The Music Man (III)
Nunsense (II)
Run for Your Wife (II)
The Foreigner (II)
The Miracle Worker (III)
Oklahoma (II)
The Ladies of Harmony
Meet Me in St. Louis
Drop Dead!
Belles
West Side Story
A Grand Night for Singing
Wait Until Dark (II)
Over the Tavern
Love, Sex, and the IRS (II)
Guys and Dolls (II)
Something’s Afoot! (II)
It’s a Wonderful Life: a live radio play
Funny Valentines
Leading Ladies
Cinderella (II)
Hoodwinked
A Tuna Christmas
The Kitchen Witches
The Dixie Swim Club
The Wizard of Oz (III)
Bingo
A Christmas Story
Leaving Iowa
The Amorous Ambassador
The Sound of Music (IV)
Our Town
Nuncrackers
Out of Sterno
The Red Velvet Cake War
The Secret Garden
Working (II)
Ravenscroft
Early One Evening at the Rainbow Bar and Grill
Love Letters
Annie (III)
Every Little Crook and Nannie
Brighton Beach Memoirs
Drop Dead!
Rex’s Exes
The Drowsy Chaperone
The Last Five Years
Be My Baby
Moon Over the Brewery
Escanaba in da Moonlight
Gypsy (II)
The Addams Family
The Best Christmas Pageant Ever
A Magical Christmas (Magic and Illusion Show)
Red, White, and Tuna
The Play: not a dirty word
9 to 5 the Musical
Much Ado About Nothing (Shakespeare in the Park)
On Golden Pond
The Wonders of Christmas (Magic and Illusion Show – 2nd season)
And Then There Were None
Mary Poppins
Calendar Girls
Plaid Tidings
Sex Please We’re Sixty
The Nerd
Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dream Coat
Arsenic and Old Lace
Trumbo
Joys of the Holidays
Complete Works of Wm. Shakespeare, abridged
The Little Mermaid
Cabin Fever
Dracula, the Musical?
A Charlie Brown Christmas
Frozen, jr
The Diary of Anne Frank (II)
A Bench in the Sun (closed early due to Covid-19)
Post Its – Notes on a Marriage
Who Dunnit murder mystery
Out of Sterno
The Red Velvet Cake War
The Secret Garden
Mama Mia
Elf the musica
Kalamazoo
Waiting for Godot
The Wizard of Oz (IV)
Avenue Q
The Play That Goes Wrong
Artichoke
Proof
School of Rock
26 Pebbles
The Christmas Schooner
Tuna Does Vegas
42nd Street
Kinky Boots
the 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee
Silent Sky
5 Lesbians Eating A Quiche
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
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