The Lost Colony Opens

On July 4, 1937, The Lost Colony debuted on Roanoke Island. Written by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Paul Green, the symphonic play was the first outdoor drama.

A Colony of the Lost Party

On July 4, 1937, The Lost Colony debuted on Roanoke Island. Written by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Paul Green, the symphonic play was the first outdoor drama. Although it was meant to last only one season, The Lost Colony is the longest-running theatrical production of its kind in the nation.

Roanoke Island residents commissioned Green to write and produce a play to commemorate the 350th anniversary of the birth of Virginia Dare in 1937. While Green was busy writing the play, residents constructed the Waterside Theater using Works Progress Administration funds and with labor supplied by the Civilian Conservation Corps. WPA funds were also used to hire out-of-work professional actors from New York to play the leads.

The Lost Colony opened to a packed house and, despite the economic hardships of the time, the play drew good crowds through the remainder of the summer. When President Franklin D. Roosevelt attended on August 18, the anniversary of Virginia Dare’s birth, the national attention that resulted insured that the production would return for a second season.

In 2013 The Lost Colony was awarded a Tony Honor for Excellence in Theater.

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