reprinted from

Producer James B.
McKenzie,
Westport Country Playhouse's Shepherd, Dead at 75
21-FEB-2002
— By Kenneth Jones and Robert Simonson
James B. McKenzie, former executive producer of the
Westport Country Playhouse in Connecticut, died Feb. 20 after a battle
with cancer and pneumonia, leaving behind a rich and varied theatrical
career, including 41 years helming one of the nation's major summer stock
theatres.
Mr. McKenzie, 75, left Westport Country Playhouse in
Westport, CT, January 2000. His plan was to focus on commercial theatre.
One of his many ventures over the years was running JBM Productions, which
produces road tours and licenses plays in the United States and Canada.
"It's been a good run: 419 plays and lots of
theatrical adventures, but it's time to produce once again in the
commercial theatre, where I belong," Mr. McKenzie said at the time.
A native of Appleton, WI, where, in grade school, he
played the lead in his own version of Hamlet, Mr. McKenzie would
work all over the United States as a stage manager, press agent, actor,
stagehand, producer and general manager. His career spanned more than half
a century in the professional theatre with over 2,000 productions. Over
the years, he was the producer or general manager many regional theatres,
including the Westport Country Playhouse in Westport, CT, Paper Mill
Playhouse in Millburn, NJ, the American Conservatory Theatre in San
Francisco, CA, the Peninsula Players Theatre in Fish Creek, WI, Mineola
(Long Island) Playhouse and the Royal Poinciana Playhouse in Palm Beach,
FL.
McKenzie began his 56 career at Peninsula Players just
after World War II as an intern, said Todd Schmidt, general manager of the
summer theatre. He went on to be everything from an actor to a stage
manager. For the last 30 years, he served as executive producer, selected
the Fish Creek season each year and cast the ensemble.
Mr. McKenzie produced plays on Broadway, including And
Miss Reardon Drinks a Little, The Girl in the Freudian Slip and The
Secret Affairs of Mildred Wild. He also produced over 60 national and
international tours — including tours of Russia, Japan, South America,
and every state in the U.S. except Alaska.
He operated theatre restaurants in such cities as San
Francisco, Palm Beach and Westport. In the early 1950s he helped create
over 100 first time live television shows for NBC, and later produced
seven television plays for PBS. He also co-owned the Merrill-McKenzie
advertising agency.
Mr. McKenzie was an active member of the League of
American Theatres and Producers, vice president of the Council of Stock
Theatres, president of the Council of Resident Summer Theatres, executive
producer of the Connecticut Theatre Foundation, a trustee of the Actors'
Equity Association Pension and Health Fund, a member of the Association of
Theatrical Press Agents and Managers, the Actors' Equity Association and
the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees.
He was the recipient of the St. Mary Alumni Achievement
Award, the Conservator of American Arts Award, the Connecticut Critics
Circle Award for Outstanding Contribution to Theatre, and was presented a
Lifetime Achievement Award by the Town of Westport in 1998.
He was an avid sailor, an experienced ocean navigator
and took part in many Newport-to-Bermuda sailboat races.
Mr. McKenzie had a BA from the University of Iowa and
an MA from Columbia University. He served in the U.S. Navy in the Pacific
during World War II.
He is survived by his wife, Philisse Barrows; his four
children, David James, Kevin John, Amy Marie and Agatha Halekulani; two
grandchildren, Valia and Gwendolyn; two brothers and two sisters.
A service to celebrate his life will be held at a
future date. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Actors Fund,
729 7th Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10019. The Collins Funeral Home of Norwalk
CT is in charge of arrangements.
Schmidt said a memorial will be held in Door County,
WI, later this year, when the weather gets warmer. Mr. McKenzie's ashes
will be scattered on the Peninsula Players grounds, a peaceful wooded plot
bordering the shores of Green Bay.
*
In 1930, the Westport Country Playhouse was founded by
one of the great names in American theatre, Lawrence Langner (who was
actually born in Wales) and his wife, Armina Marshall. They purchased a
100-year-old cow barn in an apple orchard adjacent to the Post Road in
what was then the fringes of Westport.
According to the playhouse history statement, written
by Mr. McKenzie, they commissioned designer Cleon Throckmorton to
transform the interior of the barn, by then a tanning factory, into a
theatre.
In 1931, the curtain went up on the first production at
the Westport Country Playhouse. By 2000, more than 700 plays have been
produced and almost four million people have attended.
Performers over the years have included Helen Hayes,
Henry Fonda, Ethel Barrymore, Tyrone Power, Jessica Tandy, Gene Kelly and
Tallulah Bankhead. More than 75 new works premiered at Westport and
transferred to Broadway.
The famed Langner (1890-1962) helped found The
Washington Square Players, The Theatre Guild and American Shakespeare
Festival in Stratford, CT.
Visit the website at www.westportplayhouse.com.
|