Prince Street Players, Ltd.

Prince Street Players, Ltd. The Finest Family Entertainment Founded in 1965 by Jim Eiler, The Prince Street Players, Ltd. began a new era in Family Theatre.

Starting in a loft on Prince Street in New York City as a repertory company and then expanding rapidly to include several touring companies playing East Coast "Stock" theatres and schools, the reputation quickly spread and Prince Street Players became a leading name in quality Family Theatre on Broadway and Network Television. That reputation has been upheld for over thirty years as the Company pe

rformed to great acclaim both nationally and internationally. Although no longer touring, the Eleven Musical Shows are being performed worldwide. Scripts and scores are available to be leased for performance by schools and theatres through Music Theatre International. Each script sent out by MTI includes production notes, costume & set sketches and a wealth of information to help each presenter produce a polished theatre event. These musicals are designed to be performed by adults or young adults for family audiences, and are considered by many to be "simply the best around".

Good thinking!
12/22/2018

Good thinking!

Truth.

Current President  David M. Lile
10/26/2017

Current President David M. Lile

We are working to keep the Prince Street Players name at the forefront of young people's theatre. We have a new web site...
01/28/2017

We are working to keep the Prince Street Players name at the forefront of young people's theatre. We have a new web site. (Princestreetplayers.com). Check it out. You might find a picture of you or one of the productions you were in. One ongoing project is to add cue to cue accompaniment cd's for those venues that don't have a music department. Alice in Wonderland has just been finished being recorded and is available for lease at the music theatre international site as is Pinocchio, Cinderella and soon to be available sleeping beauty and Aladdin! We have been in business for 50 years and still thriving thanks to Jim EILER, Jeanne Bargy and the great scripts and music that they created. Our legacy to the world, and that "our" includes everyone who has ever worked for Prince street players ltd in any capacity, is one of music, joy and laughter. Thank you all who brought your wonderful talents to the eleven shows.
Please stay in touch. I'd love to hear your stories and catch up with you. The world can sometimes be a rather frightening place but this company and its many members have brought and are still bringing joy and laughter across the world.
My thanks to all of you. ❤️ David

Eleven Classic Award Winning Children's Musicals for your school or theater available now to be leased from Music Theatre International

12/18/2016

For any one who worked with Michael Murphy who was our beloved company stage manager for many years please keep him in your prayers. He is in the Detroit Receiving Hospital, 4201 St. Antoine Blvd, Detroit, MI 48201 - 313 745 3000. He is being treated for a badly infected cut which requires hyperbaric Chamber treatment and surgery.

09/25/2016

Trail or for a recent production in the phillippines

The act one flying sequence from the CBS-TV special of ALADDIN.  Will B Able is the Genii - Fred Grades is Aladdin and G...
09/13/2016

The act one flying sequence from the CBS-TV special of ALADDIN. Will B Able is the Genii - Fred Grades is Aladdin and Graziella Able is the Dancing Doll. Not only did it work so beautifully when we filmed it at the Ed Sullivan Theatre in NY but each time it is done on stage it brings down the house. Contact Music Theatre International for Leasing Information or check out the Prince Street Players, Ltd. web site which is still a building princestreetplayers.com

The Prince Street Players

07/20/2016

All those who worked for Prince Street we have created a reunion site - We Worked at Prince Street Players, Ltd. - please check out the site - it has been created for all of you who made Prince Street Players, Ltd. the Company held in high esteem throughout the US and further. Reach out say Hi - let everyone know what's up in your life. This site you are on now will be for the latest news of productions and upgrades in our shows leased exclusively by Music Theatre International.

Tomorrow July 20th marks the sixth anniversary of Jim Eiler's exiting the big stage.  His legacy lives on in his writing...
07/19/2016

Tomorrow July 20th marks the sixth anniversary of Jim Eiler's exiting the big stage. His legacy lives on in his writings and music. An exciting, delightful, charming story teller both in life and on the written page - he is missed. I think of him daily as I manage the company. Prince Street Players, Ltd was such an important part of his life. As long as there are children and families his works for them will continue to thrive. In honor of Jim we are undertaking a revitalization of the Company. A new web site is being created for Prince Street and it will showcase Jim and his shows and lead more people to Music Theatre International to lease these great musicals for the family audience. This should be ready by the middle of September. Cue to Cue Recordings of the scores of each of the shows are being recorded to offer to those who lease the works but have no music department or budget for the music. These are just a few of the things being implemented and planned. Jim created so much joy in so many people's lives - he lives on in our hearts. Thank you Jim for all that you gave us and the world.

05/22/2016

PETER FILICHIA wrote this article regarding Victoria Mallory and Kurt Peterson's memorial album. In it he mentions that she got her start in Prince Street Players, Ltd. and sang If I Could Be A Princess from our ALADDIN - it was really from our CBS-TV version of THE EMPEROR'S NEW CLOTHES. I contacted both Peter and Kurt - Kurt said that they would try to change it in any future pressings of the CD and booklet of the album.

May 20, 2016
WHEN EVERYTHING WAS INDEED POSSIBLE

“We wanted to honor all who are no longer with us.”

So we hear Kurt Peterson tell the audience at the end of the newly released compact disc WHEN EVERYTHING WAS POSSIBLE. It’s the show he did with Victoria Mallory at City Center on April 29, 2012.

Yes, several of the people with whom one or both of them had worked had died: Michael Bennett, Leonard Bernstein, Alexander H. Cohen, Hermione Gingold, Arthur Laurents, Joe Layton, Bob Merrill, Ethel Shutta, Betty Comden and Adolph Green.

But the sad irony is that on that night, Victoria Mallory – the original Young Heidi in FOLLIES and the actress who created the role of Anne Egerman in A LITTLE NIGHT MUSIC -- had no idea that she had only 853 days to live. On August 30, 2014, Mallory succumbed to pancreatic cancer.

She died heroically. Once she was diagnosed, Mallory decided not to endure life-extending treatments. Why spend the little time you have remaining with daily and doleful visits to the hospital in a losing cause? Better to experience life as best you can, far away from tests, treatments and the inevitable bad news.

Here, however, Mallory is the picture of health and in great voice, easing her way through CARNIVAL’s “Love Makes the World Go Round” and “Yes, My Heart,” reprising her Anne in “Soon” and delivering “If I Were a Princess” from ALADDIN.

Those who know the show currently at the New Amsterdam or have the ALADDIN cast album may be scratching their heads trying to remember an Alan Menken, Howard Ashman or Tim Rice song by that name. No, it’s a song from The Prince Street Players’ version of ALADDIN, which Mallory did as a child. Everybody has to start somewhere, as Peterson proves, too, with his jaunty rendition of “Woe Is Me” from THE FROG PRINCE.

(These are not the only unfamiliar songs on the album. Peterson wrote lyrics and Jesse Wiener composed a fetching opening song and a solid closer, each of which has a lot to say about our two stars.)

We learn that after such juvenilia, Georgia resident Mallory and Wisconsin native Peterson came to New York, met at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, and started a friendship that went romantic for a while. That was in keeping with their not only playing Romeo and Juliet at the school but also Tony and Maria in you-know-what at the State Theatre in 1968.

Of the several shows presented by Richard Rodgers for Music Theatre of Lincoln Center in the ‘60s, this WEST SIDE STORY was the only one that went unrecorded. At least that’s semi-remedied here as we get a taste of what their audiences heard through their “Tonight.”

Two and a half seconds of kettledrums is all the audience at City Center needed to hear in order to prompt their appreciative applause. The low, booming sounds made by drummer Kory Grossman signaled the start of the unforgettable FOLLIES Prologue.

As we all know, anyone associated with the original production of that 1971 masterwork will always be musical theater royalty. So here is the original Young Ben and the original Young Heidi here to entertain. “You’re Gonna Love Tomorrow,” they sing, but this recording proves that the audience had already come to love them and the song for 41 years’ worth of yesterdays.

Many Broadway studies say that The Golden Age of Musicals ended with FIDDLER (1964), LA MANCHA (1965) or CABARET (1966), but we must extend the deadline to at least April 4, 1971, when FOLLIES opened – hell, to July 1, 1972 when it closed.

Knowing what we know now, the most heartbreaking moment of the disc comes when Mallory plays FOLLIES’ adult Heidi Schiller. Hard to believe – especially when one sees her radiant and glowing picture on the back cover of the CD booklet -- that Mallory, then 63, was actually older than Justine Johnson, who was merely approaching her 50th birthday when she originated the role. And how did Mallory seem so much younger?

Listening to her do Heidi’s shining moment in FOLLIES makes for some poignant moments. Look at those lyrics: “One more kiss before we part, One more kiss and farewell. Never shall we meet again … One more glimpse of the past … One more souvenir of bliss knowing well that this one must be the last … All things beautiful must die … One more kiss and goodbye.”

The song urges us to “Never look back,” but even Stephen Sondheim, whose congratulatory letter to Peterson and Mallory was recited to the audience (and is included on the disc), would have to allow this one exception to the rule.

Actually, Mallory said goodbye to Broadway after A LITTLE NIGHT MUSIC, for life imitated art. Just as Anne ran off with Henrik in the Sondheim-Wheeler masterpiece, Mallory married original Henrik Mark Lambert and relocated in California, where she did one TV series and a few guest spots. Mostly, however, she mothered a daughter Ramona who – another irony – took on her mother’s role (and her mother’s last name) in the 2009 revival of A LITTLE NIGHT MUSIC.

Peterson appeared in DEAR WORLD with Angela Lansbury (who attended and took a bow) and sings from Jerry Herman’s most ambitious score. But his “Too Many Mornings” and “Being Alive” in a still-resonant voice aren’t the only Sondheim references for the still-handsome entertainer.

For Peterson had set the wheels in motion for SONDHEIM: A MUSICAL TRIBUTE on March 11, 1973. The astonishing evening is still remembered and discussed more than 40 years later, mostly thanks to a still-available cast recording affectionately known as “The Scrabble Album” for the many beige tiles on its cover.

Those Sondheim songs that none of us knew before that concert or album? We might have never heard them if not for this night, for it did spur Sondheim to open his trunk. So let’s thank Peterson for that, too.

The recording also tacitly gives us some advice. As it turns out, Peterson and Mallory drifted apart and didn’t speak for 35 years. To cite another Harold Prince musical: “All the Wasted Time.”

As a result, if there’s someone who used to be a good and important friend but has somehow faded out of your life, perhaps it’s time to make that phone call or find that page. Do it now as long as everything is STILL possible.

— Peter Filichia

These pictures are from Playhouse 395 in Bishop, California.  Looks like a remarkable production our Prince Street Playe...
01/27/2016

These pictures are from Playhouse 395 in Bishop, California. Looks like a remarkable production our Prince Street Players, Ltd. and Jim Eiler's version of ALICE IN WONDERLAND.

Address

Boca Raton, FL
33486

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Prince Street Players, Ltd. posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Establishment

Send a message to Prince Street Players, Ltd.:

Share