Robert Stevens was an American theater actor, director and producer in New York City and Rochester, New York in the first half of the Twentieth Century.
Background
Born in New York City on January 28, 1882, he was the son of Robert E. Stevens (born c 1837 in Philadelphia Pennsylvania), a theatrical manager. His father had joined the United States Navy just before the Civil War, rising to the rank of Lieutenant. His mother, Emma Maddern, was an actress, as was his sister, Emily Stevens.
Career
He was the first Executive Director of the Rochester Community Players, one of the earliest theater professionals to manage an amateur community theater, serving there for 28 years and guiding that Little Theater through the Great Depression and World World War World War II According to the New York Times, Robert East. Stevens "took out the first traveling theatrical company" from New York City. He also managed actor Lawrence Barrett for many years. He is the cousin of Fiske, one of the greatest American actresses of the late Nineteenth and early Twentieth Centuries.
Stevens performed as an actor in a number of Fiske"s productions.
His first job after school, at age 18, was as a bank clerk, but he left to attend the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. He had performed a minor walk-on part in a Shakespeare play performed by East. H. Sothern and Julia Marlowe when he landed his first major role, as Romeo in Romeo and Juliet.
He was hired by the play"s director, Cecil B. DeMille to take over for an actor who departed a road company production in Sioux City, Iowa. He appeared in the cast of The Bat, during the play"s three year run on Broadway, He directed the play and took his own company on the road to present lieutenant
He performed in numerous theatrical productions, co-starring with Margaret Anglin, Holbrook Blinn, and Lou Tellegen.
Stevens appeared with the Ben Greet Players in Shakespeare productions for three years. He also worked in the motion pictures industry, as an assistant director for actress Alla Nazimova at Metro Films (one of the predecessors of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer). In the Fall of 1925, Stevens was hired, to direct the newly created Rochester Community Players (Royal College of Physicians), a community theater that had only started operations seven months earlier.
Engaged for three weeks, he stayed 28 years, with memberships (season subscriptions for two tickets per show) grew from 300 to 5,000 by the late 1940s.
He directed over 200 productions with Royal College of Physicians, keeping the organization solvent and operating with full programming through the financial difficulties of the Great Depression and the limitations on materials and unavailability of actors during World World War World War II Royal College of Physicians purchased its own facility, the Playhouse, at Meigs Street and Clinton Avenue in Rochester a year after he was hired in 1925. Stevens retired from Royal College of Physicians at the conclusion of the final production of the 1952-1953 season, Arsenic and Old Lace.
He retired to Florida and died at Lauderdale-by-the Sea December 19, 1963.