The American Light Opera Company was a semi-professional theatre company performing light operas and musicals in Washington, D.C. from 1960 to 1968. It was founded by a group of former and (at the time) current members of the University of Michigan's Gilbert & Sullivan Society.
Its first production, The Mikado, took place on 17 June 1960 at Naval Ordnance Laboratory in White Oak, Maryland. Over the next few years, the company grew rapidly, with five to six productions a season, usually performed in the Lisner Auditorium at George Washington University. The company also performed at the White House,[1] and its chorus appeared several times with Washington's National Symphony Orchestra. Their final performance was West Side Story performed at Western High School in Washington D.C. on 28 January 1968.
Notable past performers with the company include the actress Georgia Engel,the dancer and choreographer George Faison, the opera singer Richard Stilwell, and the performer "Rusty" Russ Thacker.[2] The President and Executive Director of the National Theatre in Washington, D.C., Donn B. Murphy, directed several productions for the company – Show Boat (1961), Finian's Rainbow (1962), South Pacific (1963), The King and I (1964), Camelot (1965) and West Side Story (1966).
The Mikado, Menotti's Old Maid and the Thief with Sullivan and Burnand's Cox and Box, G&S The Gondoliers, Brigadoon, South Pacific(twice), Carousel, Kiss Me Kate, Paint Your Wagon(scheduled to open the night JFK was assassinated),The Fantasticks, Showboat, Guys and Dolls, New Moon, Little Mary Sunshine, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, My Fair Lady, Carnival, Camelot, Oklahoma!, Once Upon A Mattress,The Music Man, Desert Song,The King and I,Kismet(at Howard University's Cramton Auditorium for Cherry Blossom Festival),How to Succeed in Business etc., Gypsy, Annie Get Your Gun(both at DC's Gallaudet Theatre), West Side Story. Some productions toured to Baltimore, Richmond and Norfolk, VA.