Theatre Company History

The history of Grandstreet Theatre begins with the vision of a man, Carl Darchuck, a Montana native, who returned in May, 1975 to investigate the potential for starting a community theater in Helena, much as he did in Fort Peck, Montana, Tacoma and Port Townsend, Washington.

Within a month he and a handful of dedicated volunteers had established the ballroom of the historic Placer Hotel (at the corner of Grand St. and Last Chance Gulch) as the base of his operation. Grand Street Theatre opened its first production, How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying in August, 1975. In their first ten months of operation, they did ten shows on their postage stamp stage. After How to Succeed in Business… came Our Town, South Pacific, The Owl and the Pussycat, The Mousetrap, A Christmas Carol, Bye Bye Birdie, The Clown Prince of Wanderlust (a children’s play), Hello Dolly!, Inherit the Wind and The Music Man.

During those first ten months, Grand Street Theatre entertained some 8,000 theatre-goers and involved 150 volunteer actors, technicians and musicians, a few who still find his and her way back to the boards after all those years.

In 1933, the Unitarian Church was turned over to the city to replace the original library facility that had been nearly destroyed by earthquakes. The original architect’s plans called for a church that was to have a stage, auditorium, box office and dressing rooms, hardly normal specifications for a church. But the Unitarians wanted a suitable facility for pageants, recitals, and dramas. In its transformation from a church to a library, the entire complexion of the building was changed to make it more suitable as a library.

In late August, 1976, the “library” again became available. A local architectural firm donated renovation plans, and Grand Street Theatre’s staff and members went into action. False floors and a mezzanine had to be carefully torn out, and carpenters were brought in to restore the tiered seating in the balcony and build a second exit stairway.

But a major question still remained unanswered: How could a year-old theater group finance such a project? The answer: Land valued at $50,000 was donated to the Grand Street Theatre by Esther and Wib Harrer, local ranchers. Their interest in promoting good theater in the Helena Valley cast them as the answer to Darchuck’s prayers. Grand Street Theatre was able to sell the land and convert the funds to desperately needed improvements.

With the building re-converted to a theater format, Grand Street Theatre opened its second season with its sixteenth production, The Man of La Mancha.

Initially, Grand Street was used as two words, but in 1983 the Board of Directors of Broadwater Productions, Grand Street Theatre’s governing board, combined the two words into one to avoid confusion on the name of the Theatre and its original location on Grand Street and Last Chance Gulch.

The Theatre has flourished under the guidance of several skilled directors, most notably Don McLaughlin, who served for fourteen years, leaving in August, 1993. During the McLaughlin years, Don’s wife, Janet, began the Grandstreet Theatre school which has grown to include a summer program in addition to its original school-year program.

We tip our hats to those whose hard work paid off 30-plus years later. Credit goes to these and many more “visionaries”: Carl Darchuk, Margaret & Jon Wheeler, Trish Friez, Sheila Sullivan, Don Ingels, Marie Kall, Clem Shafer, Bill Scribner, Wib & Esther Harrer, Dave Maynard, Ron Richards, Tim Kennedy, Ruth Ann Massey, Bette Clarke, Steve Petrilli, Kathy O’Connell, Jan Mueller, Leslie Remington, Jerilyn Gilbert, Jim Jackson, Mike Stergious, Colleen Rhein, John & Bruce Barrett, Jeff Franjevic, Jannie Harper, Steve Harper, Dorothy Harper, Jimmer Sullivan, Paul Ingels, Gretchen Ingels, Daren Ingels, Annette Ingels, Sanna Porte, Paul Porte, Glen Porte, and Amy Porte. Shelly Zuroff, Jim Steffeck, Pat Murdo, Mary Vollmer, J.D. Wheeler, Polly Maynard and Patti Penner.

Wendy Thompson, Marianne Melton, Harry Smith, Earl Vermillion, Barb Simic, Chris Fenderson, Paul Cooper, Margianne Flanagan, John & Elaine Cooper, Bob Swanberg, Jerry & Mary Lee Schneider, Cindy Graff, Margaret Benes Miller, Henry Leake, Steve Palmer, Don Maynard, Vickie Smith, Pete & Jean Hardie, Christy Strom, Derinda Zuelke, Walt Woods, Nancy Koziara, Sue, Harris, Tim Holmes, Sandy Zuroff, Margo Anderson, Dick Draper, Don & Libby Torgerson, Greg McKenzie, Fred Norton, Dan McGowan, the famous Bonnie Bowler, Don Archibald and Charles Wheeler.

David Anderson, Ted Clearman, Mark Meloy, Cathy Devoll, Charlene Murdo, Leisa Smith, Ron Duda, Margaret Wood, Leslie Remington, Mary Conklin, Margo Lustgarten, Stephanie Lindsay, Glee La Vigne and those others who continue to haunt the stages and shows of Grandstreet’s past.