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Home » Keywords » concord players

Items Tagged with 'concord players'

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Cultural Spotlight

The Concord Players

March 28, 2025
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She was spirited, unconventional, energetic, and prodigiously creative, so it’s no surprise that Louisa May Alcott (along with her sister, Anna) founded a theater company to entertain family, friends, and neighbors in the Town of Concord. Their Concord Dramatic Union of 1856 featured Alcott’s original plays and vignettes. 

In 1872, the Union became The Concord Dramatic Club and, in 1919, The Concord Players, when a dedicated group of amateur actors and theater lovers came together to “stimulate interest in dramatic work in the town and to elevate the standard of performance.” The group first performed in Monument Hall but, over time, established a permanent space in the Veteran’s building, a former drill shed located at 51 Walden Street. They built a stage with the aid of theater architect Charles Blackhall; a small replica of his design for Boston’s Colonial Theater. 


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The Concord Players Celebrate 100 Years…Louisa May Alcott’s Legacy Lives On

December 15, 2019
Linda McConchie
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The Concord Players trace their roots to Louisa May Alcott who, along with her sisters, founded the Concord Dramatic Union in 1857. The Alcotts performed their plays, many of them original, in the parlor of their home at Orchard House and in the homes of friends in the town. 


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Featured Stories

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    Discover the Battle Road

    Next month, tens of thousands will gather in Concord, Lexington, and the surrounding towns to witness the time-honored traditions, tactical demonstrations, and festive commemorations that pay tribute to the first battles of the American Revolution. Behind these inspiring and historically accurate demonstrations are hundreds of historians, reenactors, costumers, and others who spend months preparing for Patriots' Day. Meet some of those people and discover highlights from anniversary events held in Concord over the past 250 years in today's articles from Discover the Battle Road: "Many Voices, One Revolution" and "Echoes of April 19: A Historical Look at Concord's Anniversary Traditions."
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