Goodman Theatre (Chicago). Founded in 1925 with a memorial gift from the family of Kenneth Sawyer Goodman, who had been active in little theatre movements and had written some plays before being killed in World War I, the 683‐seat theatre was designed by Howard Van Doren Shaw and built alongside the Art Institute of Chicago on Lake Shore Drive, where city ordinances relating to height forced it to be placed underground. The house opened in 1925 with the first American performance of Galsworthy's The Forest, and its resident company continued to mount original plays and classics until it was forced to disband temporarily in 1930 because of the Depression. It served as a drama school before it was reactivated in 1969. Under the direction of Gregory




