Beatrice Herford’s Vokes Theater
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vokes_Theatre
The Vokes Theater, also known as Beatrice Herford’s Vokes Theater, is a 1904 miniature of a London theater in Wayland, Massachusetts built by and named for Beatrice Herford. The theater is located on the estate of Herford and her husband, Sidney Hayward and has been designated as a Massachusetts Historical Site.
History
Herford built the theater as a tribute to the London music halls that were typical for monologist‘s performances and in 1946, Herford donated the theater to the Vokes Players, a local non-profit group.
For the first 30 years or so of the theatre’s life, it was not open to the public. Rather, Herford would invite her friends, who included leading actors on the English-speaking stage, singers, New England artists, and others (it was an eclectic mix) to be her guests at her estate in Wayland. In the theatre, performing only for their own amusement, leading lights of the New York and London stages would perform plays as an ensemble. A wall exists showing the signatures of some of those who came to Wayland including Ellen Terry, George Arliss, Florence Arliss, Katharine Cornell; the house archives show that other guests included diva Geraldine Farrar, and actors Ethel Barrymore, John Drew, Norah Bayes, and others.