
The Carolyn Blount Theatre has been home to the Alabama Shakespeare Festival since 1985.
The 'Alabama Shakespeare Festival' (ASF) is the seventh largest
Shakespeare festival in the world. Each year, it attracts more than 300,000 visitors from each of the
United States, and more than 60 countries, to its home, in
Montgomery,
Alabama.
ASF operates all year, producing 12–14 world-class productions annually, typically including three works of William Shakespeare. The remaining
plays sample various genres and
playwrights, sometimes with an emphasis on
Southern works. ASF's Southern Writers Project nurtures the creation of new plays that reflect Southern themes.
ASF began in 1972 as a summer stock-theater project in
Anniston; its first performance was at the
Anniston High School auditorium, before a single critic and his wife; the critic considered the performance very poor and predicted that ASF would not survive. Eventually, the Shakespeare Festival grew to garner critical acclaim, but lacked the financial support to keep it afloat. In December 1985, ASF moved to Montgomery, as the result of
Mr. and Mrs. Winton Blount's $21.5-million gift of a performing-arts complex set in a 250-
acre (1-
km²) park, the Winton M. Blount Cultural Park. The Carolyn Blount Theatre houses the 750-seat Festival Stage and the 225 seat Octagon Theatre.
ASF operates a Professional Actor Training program leading to the
M.F.A. degree in cooperation with the
University of Alabama Department of Theatre and Dance.
Tony Award–winning actor
Norbert Leo Butz and
Emmy Award–winning actor
Michael Emerson are two of the program's most successful alumni.
Since 1998, the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts has also been in the Blount Cultural Park.
External links
★
ASF home page
★
ASF Graduate Programs
★
The University of Alabama Department of Theatre and Dance