Please feel free to use this site as a communication tool to Sergio Garcia or Bryan Hutson, founders of the theatre. Take a few minutes to browse this blog, see how we started and where we are going. We know you will catch the excitement of the Stone Street Theatre in downtown Dallas! Cabaret, Comedy...and Cocktails!

Wednesday, July 27, 2005

Downtown CDA Residents Meeting

Last night, July 26, Bryan and I introduced the Stone Street Theatre to the downtown Dallas Residents Council Association. (The CDA is an organization of downtown residents who meet regularly to discuss the going-ons in the downtown Dallas area.) The council is very excited to have the Stone Street Theatre be a part of downtown Dallas and be a grass roots organization for downtown. The general sentiment, again, was downtown needs and wants a local, grass roots entertainment venue like the Stone Street Theatre. The council would like Stone Street Theatre to be a main stay in downtown Dallas. Bryan and I are working hard all our ducks in a row and want to thank all of those who have stepped up to the plate to show their support and offer their help. Keep the buzz going and tell all your friends about the Stone Street Theatre. We are still planning to start production in late September. Keep looking here for the opening performance date! Thanks again to all of you out there who are making this happen!

Monday, July 04, 2005

Sunday's Dallas Morning News Article - The Buzz Is On!

Small theater has big potential
08:37 PM CDT on Saturday, July 2, 2005
If, as planned, the newly formed Stone Street Theatre Group presents its first performance in September, don't expect anything like the 32-trumpet choir that will hail the November groundbreaking of the $275 million Dallas Center for the Performing Arts.
But among downtown residents, the group's debut – in a room over a pizza parlor on Elm Street – may be the more anticipated event.
Downtown has no shortage of major cultural venues, but few have the casual, drop-in feel of a small theater group.
"I think it's phenomenal," said Kourtny Penn, director of marketing and events for the Central Dallas Association, which has pledged to help promote the group.
"It gives downtown residents something more to do in the evenings. And as a downtown resident myself, I can tell you that's really important."
The theater group is being founded by Bryan Hutson, whose day job is assistant manager of a Calloway's Nursery. Mr. Hutson, however, is also a downtown resident with considerable experience in community theater.
The idea of a downtown theater group has been kicking around for a while, but most people who proposed it got discouraged at the lack of usable – and affordable – space, Ms. Penn said.
George Elson, managing partner of the Metropolitan Downtown Tavern, offered free use of the restaurant's third-floor banquet room overlooking Elm and Stone streets – a space that has a separate entrance and sits above Campisi's restaurant.
When Mr. Hutson called a town hall meeting of downtown residents to announce the formation of the theater group, Mr. Elson cautioned him to be realistic.
"I told him not to be disappointed if only 10 or 20 people showed up," Mr. Elson said.
Sixty did.
The group is planning to offer a mixture of cabaret, performance theater and dance, Mr. Hutson said.
"We want people to spend four hours downtown, go to the show and maybe one of the restaurants around," he said.
The banquet hall has a bar in the back, but the emphasis will be on the stage.
"We're not going to be the Windmill Dinner Theater," Mr. Elson said.

Almost unnoticed in a flurry of recent downtown announcements was the Dallas City Council's recent authorization for the purchase of land for two downtown parks.
City