Hartford Stage Founding Artistic Director Jacques Cartier Passes at Age 94
Posted by: Official_Press_Release 05:12 pm EST 01/27/25

Hartford Stage Founder, Theater Director Jacques Cartier Passes Away at 94

"There's a fella wandering around town with a good idea. If he stops you, give him a few minutes." (The Hartford Times, 1963)

January 27, 2025, Hartford, CT – It is with great sadness that Hartford Stage shares that Jacques Cartier, the well-respected theater director, educator and founder of Hartford Stage Company, passed away in December 2024 at age 94. A graduate of Yale Drama School, Cartier directed a number of successful productions in Hartford, including works by Molière, Beckett, Genet, Shakespeare, Williams, Albee, and a particularly notable production of Eugene O'Neill's A Long Days' Journey into Night in 1971.

Jacques Cartier led Hartford Stage from its founding in 1963 through 1968 when he was succeeded by Paul Weidner. Cartier's theatre company would move to its present location on Church Street in downtown Hartford in 1976 and go on to receive the Tony Award for Outstanding Regional Theater in 1989. After his time in Hartford, Cartier went on to freelance direct in New York, lead Center Stage in Baltimore, and serve as the head of the directing program at Boston University for over two decades.

"It is with a heavy heart that we announce the passing of Mr. Cartier," says Melia Bensussen, Artistic Director of Hartford Stage since 2019. "Mr. Cartier's vision and legacy for producing award-winning, top-notch theater in Connecticut lives on. Jacques Cartier, a born storyteller, lived a storied life, from hosting various entertainment acts in his time in the Army to teaching literature before launching his successful career in the theater. There is much to be learned and admired from Mr. Cartier's long and rich life, particularly his dedication to live theater, and we are honored to continue his legacy."

"After identifying Hartford as a promising spot for a new theater," his obituary reads, "Mr. Cartier had to charm and cajole the skeptical bankers and insurance executives of the city that they deserved their own first-class theater, even going so far as to step into a moving car of one such executive to persuade him to bankroll his vision. Eventually raising close to $100,000, quite a sum at the time, Hartford Stage had its inaugural season in the spring of 1964, in a 225-seat theater converted from an old supermarket warehouse with productions of Othello, Rashomon, The Caretaker and The Country Wife and was a rousing success."

Cartier attributed his own passion for wanting to run a theater company to reading a book by the esteemed stage director and producer, Margo Jones (a.k.a. the "Texas Tornado"). In it, he read about the how-tos and how-nots, from budgets to season planning. The 34-year-old Cartier, then living in New Haven, shirked the idea of moving to the happening New York theater scene and found another way: "start a theater and hire yourself."

Jacques Cartier is survived by his wife of 66 years, Diana F. (Barry) Cartier; and his son, Nicholas Cartier, a lawyer in Washington, D.C.

About Hartford Stage

Hartford Stage has been led by Artistic Director Melia Bensussen and Managing Director Cynthia Rider since the summer of 2019. The theater's mission is to enlighten, entertain, and educate by creating theatrical programming of the highest caliber that has a transformative impact on audiences, the community, and its field. Under Bensussen's artistic vision, the theater has reimagined classics including Eugene O'Neill's Ah, Wilderness! which reopened the theater to great acclaim following the pandemic and brought more work celebrating the Latine heritages in the region, including Quixote Nuevo, the virtual American Voices New Play Festival, Kiss My Aztec!, Espejos: Clean, and Simona's Search. Hartford Stage has presented various world premieres including the Broadway successes Anastasia and A Gentleman's Guide to Love and Murder (winner of four 2014 Tony Awards), and Quiara Alegría Hudes' Water by the Spoonful (winner of the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for Drama). Hartford Stage's vast education programs engage students of all ages from across the state through student matinee performances, in-school programs, theatre classes, and youth productions. HartfordStage.org
reply

Previous: Seth Bisen-Hersh Will Present Stephen Sondheim Tribute Cabarets at Don't Tell Mama on Tuesday/Thursday, January 28th/30th - Official_Press_Release 05:13 pm EST 01/27/25
Next: NINA at Theaterlab Adds Performances, Talkbacks w/ Cat Cohen & Kathryn Gallagher - Official_Press_Release 05:11 pm EST 01/27/25
Thread:


    Time to render: 0.049808 seconds.