History
The theater was originally formed as the Sacramento Civic Repertory Theatre in 1942, an ad hoc troupe formed to entertain locally stationed troops during
World War II.Realizing success on a tour of local military bases, the Sacramento Civic Repertory Theatre aspired to a theater of its own and on October 18, 1949 it achieved that goal with the opening of the Eaglet Theatre, named in honor of the Eagle, a
Gold Rush-era theater, built largely of canvas, that had stood on the city's riverfront in the 1850s. As a "little theater," as community theaters of the time were often called, the SCRT's home was considered a little Eagle. The theater benefited from the patronage of newspaper executive and heiress
Eleanor McClatchy, an enthusiastic theater supporter. It was also, briefly, the creative home of aspiring actor
Tom Hanks.
The Eaglet became the Mainstage of the nonprofit Sacramento Theatre Company, which evolved from community theater to professional troupe in the 1980s. Now staging plays in two performances spaces, it is the oldest professional theater in Sacramento. STC, as it is known, has been instrumental in the careers of such regional theater professionals as playwright
Richard Hellesen and director
Tim Ocel.
STC-2 is the Young Professionals Conservatory founded in 2003 for actors ages 12-20.
Saffron Henke, and associate artist of STC, directed the company for the first four years and directed several plays including
A Midsummer Night's Dream and
The Tale.
Renovation
After decades of use the old Sacramento Theatre Company Main Stage was renovated in the H Street Theatre Project. New features included expanded and modernized lobby and a cabaret area for special performances. The Main Stage received a make over with expanded new dressing rooms and new larger laundry facility.
Today
Sacramento Theater can accommodate 300 patrons in the proscenium auditorium of its Mainstage Theater, while the Stage Two offers a more intimate experience with only 90 seats in a black box theatre. Both provide good acoustics and sightlines. This Equity-based theatre presents 8-9 full productions per season with a reputation for excellent stage adaptations of classic literature (
To Kill A Mockingbird
,
Of Mice And Men
).