Bowen met and married the Bronx-raised Ann Raim, in Chicago. After they moved to San Francisco, Ann formed the
Pitschel Players, " named after Second City/Committee master carpenter Roland Pitschel and master Committee waitress/tip hustler Barbara Pitschel", an improvisational comedy group, and directed the group of political and social satirists, that played for ten years, performing with
Country Joe McDonald, at
Episcopal Church of St. John the Evangelist, San Francisco, on weekends at the
Intersection for the Arts and other venues in San Francisco and the
Bay Area. The Pitschel Players included
Paul Willson, John Pray,
Robin Menken,
John Bailey, James Carroll Pickett III, Gene Babo (musical director) and
Edie McClurg (beginning 1975). In 1974, producer
Joe Roth and the Pitschel Players relocated to Los Angeles. Soon after 11 November 1973, Roth and Bowen leased 8162 Melrose Avenue, as the
Pitschel Players Cabaret, which was the former
Ash Grove nightclub site, and the later
L.A. Improv.
Al Franken and
Tom Davis performed at the
Pitschel Players Cabaret.
David Lander and
Michael McKean "
moonlighted" by performing at the
Pitschel Players Cabaret. The
Pitschel Players appeared in 1977's
Cracking Up. In 1980, Bowen and Ann moved back to New York. Bowen died of a heart attack at the age of 63 while on vacation in
Marathon, Florida. (Stevenson also died from a heart attack; because of this strange coincidence, Bowen's family did not make the news of his death public until a week afterward in an attempt to minimize any confusion over the two actors and their obituaries.) ==Filmography==