George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections Research Center
Fenwick Library, MS2FL 4400 University Dr. Fairfax, Virginia 22030 Business Number: 703-993-2220 Fax Number: 703-993-8911 speccoll@gmu.edu URL: https://scrc.gmu.edu
Special Collections Research Center Staff, Meghan Glasbrenner
Repository
George Mason University. Libraries. Special Collections Research Center
Identification
C0199
Title
J. Burke Knapp papers circa 1950s-1960s
Quantity
3.45 Linear Feet, 8 boxes
Creator
Knapp, J. Burke (Joseph Burke), 1913-2009
Location
R 45, C 1, S 1, 4-5
Language
English
.
Abstract
This collection contains materials related primarily to financial matters generated during J. Burke Knapp's work with Arena
Stage in Washington, D.C.
J. Burke Knapp was born in Portland, Oregon in 1913. After graduating from Stanford University in 1933 he was selected as
a Rhodes Scholar and attended Oxford University from 1933-1936, after which he served four years working as an investment
banker in London, England before returning to the United States to continue his career in international finance. Knapp served
in various positions in the U.S. government until 1952, including senior roles with the Federal Reserve Board and the Department
of State, as well as attending the Bretton Woods Conference in 1944 which created the International Monetary Fund and World
Bank, and serving as a member of the Inter-Departmental Committee to prepare the Marshall Plan. In December 1952, he joined
the World Bank as the Director of Latin American operations and was appointed Senior Vice-President and Chairman of the Loan
Committee in 1956, serving in this position until his retirement in 1978. In 1939 he married first wife, British actress Hilary
Eaves, who served as one of his first connections to the performing arts. From 1959-1968 he served as President of the board
of Washington, D.C.'s Arena Stage, assisting with raising money and expanding and restructuring the organization into a non-profit.
He would remain on the board as a member until his death on November 22, 2009 at the age of 96.
One of the first not-for-profit theatres in the United States, as well as a pioneer of the regional theatre movement, Arena
Stage was the first regional theatre to transfer a production to Broadway ( The Great White Hope , 1967), the first invited by the U.S. State Department to tour the Soviet Union, and the first to receive a Tony Award. Founded
by Zelda Fichandler, with assistance from her husband Thomas C. Fichandler and partner Edward Mangum, in 1950, Arena Stage
was opened in Washington, D.C. to fill the void left by the closing of the National Theater in 1948. Deriving its name from
the idea of "theater in the round," Arena Stage became one of the first resident theatres in the United States, beginning
with a company of only eight actors. During the 1960s, Arena garnered international renown in its new space: the Arena Stage
Theatre. The new building, located at Sixth Street and Maine Avenue SW, was the first playhouse built in Washington, D.C.
since 1895. Generosity on the part of David Lloyd Kreeger, and others, led to the construction of the new "Kreeger Theatre,"
which opened formally on January 15, 1971. Today, Arena Stage performs to over 250,000 patrons during a September to June
season and employs nearly 200 theatre professionals.
This collection contains reports, correspondence, contracts, and general materials related primarily to financial matters
generated during J. Burke Knapp's work with Arena Stage in Washington, D.C. The majority of the materials relate to the Washington
Drama Society, Arena Stage II, stockholders, the organization's tax exemption status and non-profit application, and general
personal materials related to Arena Stage.
Bernstein, Adam. 2009. "World Bank Executive Also Led Arena Stage Theater." The Washington Post , December 9, 2009. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/local/2009/12/10/world-bank-executive-also-led-arena-stage-theater/e1e8f564-2644-4ebd-9225-6ba528b65d08/.
"J. Burke Knapp." n.d. The Association of American Rhodes Scholars. Accessed May 15, 2024. https://www.americanrhodes.org/news-obituaries-245.html.
"J. Knapp Obituary (2009) - San Francisco, CA - San Francisco Chronicle." n.d. Legacy.Com. Accessed May 15, 2024. https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/sfgate/name/j-knapp-obituary?id=22168108.