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THEATER

Cabrillo Crocker Theater

6500 Soquel Dr.

Aptos, CA 95003

BOX OFFICE

831-479-6154

Thu, Fri & Sat

12pm - 6pm

THEATER GUILD MEMBER

Join our community of donors and get invitations to special events. On the Foundation website, make sure to choose "Cabrillo Stage" in the drop-down menu to make sure your donation is supporting musical theatre excellence in Santa Cruz County.

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THE HISTORY OF STAGE

Lile Cruise.jpg

Photo by Jana Marcus

1981 - 2003

Lile O. Cruse (Founder)

Over the years Cabrillo Stage has earned the reputation for the best, splashiest musical theatre event in the Monterey Bay. However, it has been original Producing Artistic Director Lile Cruse's vision and dedication to bringing first-rate Broadway productions to our county that has made Cabrillo Stage what it is today.

 

Cabrillo Stage was born out of Cabrillo College's Summer Rep program of the 1970s. It was a demanding season of three plays and one main stage musical featuring veteran Hollywood and stage actors. Visiting talent included the likes of Vivian Vance starring in Everyone Loves Opal, John Carradine in The Man Who Came To Dinner, Sylvia Sydney in Arsenic And Old Lace and Jim Hutton in Harvey.

 

By the late 1970s the infamous Proposition 13, the Jarvis-Gann Amendment, took its toll locally by eliminating most of the tax revenue that helped fund Cabrillo College's Summer Rep program.

Not wanting to lose the Summer Rep program altogether, the Cabrillo College administration gave Lile Cruse, then Performing Arts Division Chair, the opportunity to recreate Summer Rep Theater. With Cruse's vision and leadership, a company with the aspirations of producing unparalleled musical theatre was set to produce one major stage musical each summer.

 

Taking the dual role of Executive Producer and Musical Director, Lile Cruse ambitiously selected the dance heavy Chicago for Cabrillo Stage's inaugural production in 1981. Chicago, a new musical at that time, was an ambitious undertaking for the new company. Cruse hired nationally renowned Belle Calloway to star in the production, who would later come to be a nationally recognized Broadway actress. Cabrillo Stage's breakaway production of Chicago was a hit with both the public and the reviewers. The production also set a standard for professional theatre that had not been seen before in the county, and marked the first show with paid actors, and the now renowned full pit orchestra.

 

In 1982 Cabrillo Stage installed a state of the art lighting system in the Cabrillo theatre. Equipped with new sound operating technology as well, Cabrillo Stage produced Hello Dolly, Mame, and Gypsy, the following seasons, sending Cabrillo Stage to the top of the list for summer theater events.

 

Now primed to become the Monterey Bay's only professional musical theatre company, 1987's South Pacific was a benchmark for Cabrillo Stage. Up to this point visiting directors were casting roles to actors, not singers. South Pacific director Marcia Taylor cast vocal sensations Michele Rivard and veteran Broadway actor/ singer Alan Gilbert in the title roles. Accolades were given to the superior crooning and a new standard was set at Cabrillo Stage.

The 1988 production of My Fair Lady starring film veteran Peter Donat and Kathryn Atkins was a another huge success, to the point that Cabrillo Stage added a six-show week to accommodate the crowds.

Cabrillo Stage has seen tremendous growth year to year. In 1989, Cruse introduced producing contemporary musicals alternating with classics, starting with Evita. By 1991 Cabrillo's reputation had grown significantly and actors were pouring in from the all over the Bay Area, Southern California and New York to audition.

Over the coming years Cruse chose a variety of shows: Sweeney Todd (1993), The King and I (1994), Oliver! (1995), The Sound of Music (1996), Funny Girl (1997), Annie (1999), and Peter Pan (2000), all of which were highly praised by the critics.

"Our phenomenal production team gives each show a unique vision," says Cruise, "And we do whatever it takes to make a unique theatre experience which results in our high production values."

Cabrillo Stage gained an unsurpassed reputation for bringing audiences the "must see event of the summer season" (Ann Bennett, Santa Cruz Sentinel). Always aiming for cutting edge musical theatre, Cabrillo Stage produced the Monterey Bay premiere of Honk! The Ugly Ducking in 2001, and brought you the wildly successful Some Like It Hot in 2002.

With the continued goal of presenting unparalleled musical theatre to thousands, Cabrillo Stage entered its 22nd season with “West Side Story.” Lile chose Dustin Leonard to direct this production. Leonard had acted and designed sound for Cabrillo Stage productions, but this was his first foray into directing for the company. In 2003, 15,000 people attended the summer production of West Side Story which was hailed by critics as not only an artistic success but a triumphant culmination of all that Cruse had attempted to achieve over the years. With the fanfare of West Side Story Cruse chose to retire after 22 years at the helm of Cabrillo Stage.

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2004 - 2005

Skip Epperson

In 2004 scenic designer Skip Epperson became the new Artistic Director for Cabrillo Stage producing The Music Man that summer. Dustin Leonard began serving as production manager and in 2005 Epperson tested the repertory waters by producing two musical productions, Annie Get Your Gun and The Fantasticks. The company was thrilled to have Lile Cruse return as guest Musical Director and Conductor of the pit orchestra for Annie Get Your Gun.

2006-2022

Jon Nordgren

As Stage launched into its 25th anniversary season in 2006, Jon Nordgren, known for the bands program in the Cabrillo Music Department, became the new Producing Artistic Director, choosing Guys And Dolls as his inaugural show. Upon this changing of the guard, Lile Cruse commented. "I have observed Nordgren's high production values for years and I am confident he will uphold the professional standards for which Cabrillo Stage has come to be known."

In accepting his new role as Artistic Director, Nordgren said, "I plan to continue the tradition of excellence that Lile and Skip have established at Cabrillo Stage. It is my hope that the community will continue to support our endeavors to keep this Santa Cruz tradition alive for many years to come."

With Dustin Leonard now fully serving as production manager and managing director, he helped Nordgren return the company to a two-show summer season with Little Shop of Horrors (directed by Leonard) and Kiss Me Kate (2007), and Forever Plaid and Jesus Christ Superstar (2008). The 2009 summer season of Love Perfect Change and The Wizard of Oz, were such box office sensations that Nordgren launched the company into its first Christmas season offering, producing Scrooge in the brand new Crocker Theater in the Visual and Performing Arts Complex at Cabrillo College.

Jon Nordgren continued to take the company to new heights producing multiple shows each season to sell-out crowds. He guided Cabrillo Stage through the Covid pandemic, putting on a summer of outdoor shows that were welcomed by a community that longed to gather together again for live musical theatre. Jon stepped down after the 2022 season and 17 years at the helm.

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2023

Andrea L. Hart

In November of 2022, Andrea L. Hart was hired as the new Artistic Director of Cabrillo Stage. 

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