In an era when most entertainment was performed live on stage, the opening of a new theatre was considered so newsworthy that major newspapers reported on it. The proposed opening of the Blackstone was even noted by
The New York Times, which wrote in mid-July 1909 that "...The new Blackstone Theatre, soon to be erected on Hubbard Place in Chicago... [will] have a large
seating capacity, and is to be equipped with every modern theatrical device. The stage is to be patterned on that of the New Amsterdam Theatre in this city [New York]..." The
Chicago Tribune also announced the up-coming event, and in a front-page story, the newspaper elaborated on what the Times had reported. The new theatre would feature the productions of
Charles Frohman, who would operate the theatre jointly with impresarios
Klaw &
Erlanger; the three had incorporated under the name "Blackstone Theatre Company" (which was part of their larger
Theatrical Syndicate, formed in 1896). The Blackstone Theatre officially opened on December 31, 1910, with the premiere of a Chicago playwright
George Ade's newest play "
U.S. Minister Bedloe." The Blackstone was managed by Harry J. Powers, a Chicago businessman with extensive experience in the theatre: he had worked his way up from his early days as an usher to ultimately become one of Mr. Erlanger's most trusted associated; Powers remained as the Blackstone's manager throughout its first two decades. The Blackstone's first productions featured some of that era's best known performers and playwrights—for example, after "U.S. Minister Bedloe" came a
David Belasco production, "The Return of Peter Grimm", starring David Warfield. Many of the productions had already been well received in New York before coming to the Blackstone, such as another play that featured comic actor William H. Crane, "The Senator Keeps House." But while some of these productions were the equal of the version that played in New York, Tribune theatre critic Hammond observed on several occasions that the Chicago companies lacked the biggest stars. Despite this, the touring companies that performed at the Blackstone tended to do a good job and Hammond praised them for their "effective" productions. This trend of presenting touring company versions would continue in later years, when most of the performances at the Blackstone were plays which had already won the
Pulitzer Prize or the
Tony Award, and were presented by touring companies from
New York. Also noteworthy was a presentation of
George Bernard Shaw's "
Pygmalion" in 1914; performances by the Boston Opera Company, featuring Mlle.
Anna Pavlova in 1916 and
Louis N. Parker's "
Disraeli." The Blackstone was also the home to a large women's suffrage rally and conference in 1916; in attendance were 1,200 suffragists from all over the United States. And keeping up with the times, some of the performances from the stage of the Blackstone were heard on Chicago-area radio station
WTAS, thanks to station owner Charles Erbstein, who thought it was a good idea to use the theatre for live broadcasts, and began doing so in early 1925. Because the Blackstone Theatre was a touring theatre, many actors appeared there who would not have otherwise had that opportunity if the venue had specialized in new productions. Some of the actors who graced the stage of the Blackstone include
William Gillette,
Ethel Barrymore,
John Barrymore,
Helen Hayes,
Ruth Gordon,
Katharine Cornell,
Cornelia Otis Skinner, and
Spencer Tracy. During the 1920s the Blackstone presented 60 plays by
playwrights such as
George Bernard Shaw,
Eugene O'Neill,
Seán O'Casey,
Sir Arthur Wing Pinero,
Richard Brinsley Sheridan,
Ben Jonson,
Oliver Goldsmith,
Frank Craven,
Ring Lardner, and
George M. Cohan. ==Post Blackstone Theatre Company==