The GVTeam

Board of Trustees

Advisory Board

Full-Time Staff

 

Greenbrier Valley Theatre
A Brief History

Greenbrier Valley Theatre is a live-performance
theatre and much more. GVT is involved in all
aspects of the arts and humanities, with people of
all ages. Here is a brief history of our amazing journey:

Greenbrier Valley Theatre is a live-performance
theatre and much more. GVT is involved in all aspects
of the arts and humanities, with people of all ages.
Here is a brief history of our amazing journey:

From its 1966 productions in a tent alongside the Greenbrier River to Actor's Equity affiliation in a state-of-the-art facility in downtown Lewisburg, the Greenbrier Valley Theatre has adhered to the founders' concept: quality live theatre centered around a core of professional actors and directors with opportunities for members of the community to learn stagecraft.

For our first three years, we performed in a tent beside the Greenbrier River. After performing in various borrowed spaces, in 1976 a temporary structure was erected on property loaned to us by the Greenbrier Valley Airport Authority. The facility, known as The Barn, was funded by the Benedum Foundation and built by dedicated volunteers. It served as our home for the next 21 years. During this time, through thick and thin, GVT pushed ahead, developing the framework of a regional cultural institution by hiring a full-time Artistic Director and Managing Director and a seasonal company of professional actors and technical staff. We began to blend a trained cadre of community-based actors into the resident company and orchestrate vigorous intern (college-age) and apprentice (high school) programs. Our programming also began embracing a full season of plays including experimental new works, a very successful after-school drama program, a summer camp for youngsters, classes, literary readings, special events performances, art appreciation activities, lectures, discussions, and workshops.

Knowing that our temporary facility would not last forever, we searched for a permanent home, and in 1994, purchased the vacant Leggett's Department Store in downtown Lewisburg - a vital step in providing year-round live theatre and classes in a safe, comfortable and accessible setting. We began renovations in 1999, and in 2000 we moved into our new home. We raised a section of the roof to create flexible theatre space eliminating support columns to provide an unobstructed view. We also: created a spacious, attractive lobby for our patrons; created classroom/studio space; upgraded existing building systems to accommodate the demands of live theatre; and met all federal, state and local codes including accommodations under the American Disabilities Act as well as the expectations
of theatre professionals.

Greenbrier Valley Theatre has enjoyed the support of a loyal community whose nurturing has developed a vigorous, professional organization with a vision to establish GVT as a significant regional performing theatre. In March 2006 GVT became West Virginia's Official Year-Round Professional Theatre.

 

 

Award Winning!

2008 Awarded an Access to Artistic Excellence Grant for a production of Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird from the National Endowment for the Arts

2007 Awarded an Access to Artistic Excellence Grant for a production of Tennessee Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire from the National Endowment for the Arts

2007 Awarded the “Living the Dream” Service Organization Honor Roll from the Martin Luther King, Jr., West Virginia Holiday Commission

2006 Awarded an Access to Artistic Excellence Grant for a production of The Diary of Anne Frank from the
National Endowment for the Arts

2006 Cathey Sawyer, Artistic Director, awarded Governor's Arts Award for "Artistic Excellence"

2006 Designated the State's Official Year Round Professional Theatre by the West Virginia Legislature

2005 Awarded a Creativity Grant for the creation of an historical play, Stories of Mountain Railroads, from the National Endowment for the Arts

2002 Awarded a Creativity Grant for the creation of an historical play, The Greenbrier Martyr, from the National Endowment for the Arts

2001 Designated West Virginia "Jewel of the Hills" by Governor Joe Manchin, III