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"What do Ernest Borgnine, James Burrows, Frank Lovejoy, Patricia Neal and Gregory Peck have in common?

Answer: They started their careers as starving thespians who received food as their pay at The Barter Theatre in Abingdon."1

Seventy-five years ago Abingdon, VA's Barter Theatre opened its doors for the first time. The Barter has just published "Will Work For Food," a restrospective of its humble beginnings.

The following are its two opening paragraphs.

"The year was 1931, and the worst economic depression of modern times hung dark and cold across the nation. With men begging for food, there was precious little money available for tickets to the theatre. Robert Porterfield, an actor from Southwest Virginia, had begun a promising career on Broadway, but roles became scarce as the Depression deepened."

"To add to his misery, Porterfield came home to his small New York apartment after another day of discouraging auditions to find that everything he owned had been stolen..."

1. Will Work For Food -- a review, Dalton Hammond

One Old Dress - With a sewing machine on the lawn, Barter actors make their own costumes for an operetta called \
 
Feeding the Pigs
 
Front Porch Rehearsal - Actors rehearse at Stonewall Hill, part of the former Stonewall Jackson Institute campus and another early dormitory for the Barter players.
 
Martha Washington Inn - The Martha Washington Inn in Abingdon, forced to close during the Great Depression, became the Barter actors\' first home.
 
Sitting With Weapons
 
Slow, Actors Crossing - Pat Reid and Dennis King, with the Barter\'s sign on Main Street. The signs became unofficial souveneirs and Robert Porterfield finally had to stop replacing them.
 
Spring Love Practice
 
The Hill Between - A young Robert Porterfield and Beatrice Cole in a 1935 production of \
 
Wardrobe!
 
 
 
 
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