1935

Roy Roberts and Nancy Sheridan were the leads. More comedies were presented this year at Elitch because the company selected was especially suited for comedies, although their years of experience […]
1934

The season opened with the A. E. Thomas comedy No More Ladies, a Lee Shubert production that closed for the summer at the Morosco Theater in New York, to be […]
1933

The regular season at Elitch Theatre was to open with the play Forsaking All others, However, the season began earlier than scheduled with another play. A road show production of […]
1932

Selena Royle was the leading woman and Roger Pryor the leading man. G. Bradford Ashworth returned to handle the scenic end of the productions. The director for the season was […]
1931

Carlton Miles, a former drama editor of the Minneapolis Journal who, a few seasons earlier, had served as a press agent at Elitch Gardens, wrote a tribute for the then […]
1930

On January 14, 1930, John M Mulvihill passed away at his home in Denver at 4209 W. 38th Avenue. In the Denver Post “A Tribute of Appreciation” was presented in […]
1929

Henrietta Crosman returned to Elitch Theatre with her own company and appeared in several preseason plays, namely, As You Like It, Sword of the King and Mistress Nell. She had […]
1928

Among the twelve plays of the season were Fritz Gottwald’s The Command to Love, which sparked some controversy among the theatergoers, and Arthur Wing Pinero’s The Second Mrs. Tanqueray, which […]
1927

For rehearsals, an outdoor room was used. Just outside the stage doors that adjoined the ball park the management had set up a canvas wall to separate the stage area […]
1926

There was an important change by the Elitch management in its handling of congratulatory telegrams they received each year upon the season opening. The Elitch Gardener weekly publication described the […]