Arlene Theater

The Arlene Theater is the name of a performance theater in Downtown Minot, North Dakota. [2]

Arlene Theater
AddressMinot, North Dakota
USA
OperatorMouse River Players
Capacity200 [1]
Opened2004
Website
http://www.mouseriverplayers.org/

The theater is located on First Street Southeast in Downtown Minot. The building was originally built and dedicated as the Minot Labor Temple.[3] The Mouse River Players theater group purchased the building in 2004. It was first called the Mouse River Players Community Arts Center, but renamed after Arlene L. Saugstad (1912-2014) in 2006. Saugstad was instrumental in the organization of the Mouse River Players in 1971. In 2009, the theater installed stadium seating to accommodate two hundred audience members. [4]

Mouse River Players

Mouse River Players is an all-volunteer community theatre organization. Mouse River Players began in 1971 to providing live, quality theatre performances. [5]

Mini Mousers

The Arlene Theater has a children's theater program called the Mini Mousers. The program offers students between the ages of six and fourteen classes taught by local artists. Students in the program perform in the Mouse River Players annual family production[6]

gollark: Apparently people like "negative average preference utilitarianism", where you have to produce the least average amount of dissatisfied preferences.
gollark: Do we *really*?
gollark: The "arithmetic mean".
gollark: You could use something known as the "mean".
gollark: Geometric mean?

References

  1. Lee, Paul "MRP stages N.D. premier 'Prairie Heart" Patron Online Archived October 22, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
  2. "Arlene Theater". Minot Convention And Visitors Bureau. Retrieved February 1, 2020.
  3. Feldner, Dan. "Theater is a 'labor of love'". Minot Daily News. October 1, 2009
  4. "Arlene L. Saugstad (1912-2014)". Thompson - Larson. Retrieved February 1, 2020.
  5. "Mouse River Players". Minot Convention And Visitors Bureau. Retrieved February 1, 2020.
  6. Eggers, Kelly and Walter Eggers. "Children's Theater: A Paradigm, Primer, and Resource". Scarecrow Press, 2010

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.