Huntington founded the Boston Stage Society in 1922, and was associated with the
Brattle Theatre, Peabody Playhouse, the Tributary Theater, and the Poet's Theater throughout her lifetime. Additionally, she founded the New England Repertory Theater on Joy Street in
Boston in 1938, and later founded the Provincetown Playhouse on the wharf in
Cape Cod in 1940 with Edwin Pettit and Virginia Thoms. The new playhouse replaced the old structure that existed between 1915 and 1924. She served as the owner and manager of the playhouse between its founding year and 1973. During her time there, a
Eugene O'Neill drama was produced each summer season, and the theater hosted the O'Neill Festival in 1966, where 10 of his plays were produced. Huntington was awarded the Rodgers and Hammerstein Award in 1965 for her work in American theater in the
Boston area. Later, on her 97th birthday, Governor
Michael Dukakis and the Massachusetts legislature recognized her contributions to American theater. == References ==