In later years, her goal was to build her own open-air theatre and hold her own plays, an objective which she achieved shortly before her death in 1922. Establishing the Pilgrimage Theatre (now known as the
John Anson Ford Amphitheatre) in a rural section of Los Angeles County, she then played a major role in creating that theater's first production, Life of Christ, which received significant advance newspaper coverage and was described "an American
Oberammergau".[3][4]
Biography
Born on April 12, 1878, in
Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, as Christine Wetherill, she was a daughter of Samuel Price Wetherill (1846-1926) and Christine (Northrop) Wetherill (1852-1930). Her father was a descendant of Samuel Wetherill, who was a fellow member, with
Betsy Ross, of the
Free Quaker Meeting House.[5]
Christine Wetherill was married twice, first to John V. Rice, Jr., whom she divorced in 1902, and then to
William Yorke Stevenson, son of Cornelius and
Sara Yorke Stevenson, in 1908.[6]
During the late 1910s and early 1920s, Stevenson formed an art alliance with Marie Rankin Clarke, and raised money with her to buy a piece of land on Cahuenga Pass called "Daisy Dell".[1] They then rehearsed together for their first play there, Light of Asia.[7] A second series of plays was planned, The Pilgrimage, when resistance was met from Clarke and others in the group who wanted to expand the venue's themes.[8] Leaving them to form the
Hollywood Bowl, she bought twenty-nine acres (12 ha) of land on the other side of Cahuenga Pass to build a new amphitheater for her plays, naming it The Pilgrimage Theatre, and created the Pilgrimage Play.[9][10]
The
Hollywood Pilgrimage Memorial Monument (HCM No. 617), a thirty-two-foot-high steel cross, at 2580 Cahuenga Boulevard was erected in 1923 to the memory of Miss Stevenson.
Stevenson was also known as the founder of the
Philadelphia Art Alliance,[13] which is housed in the former Samuel Price Wetherill Mansion.
A memorial service was held in her honor on Sunday, November 26, 1922, at 3:00 p.m. in the Pilgrimage Theater. In pre-memorial announcements about the planned event, newspapers reported: "Hollywood is asked to attend the service, and pay tribute in all reverence to the woman who brought the Pilgrimage Play to Hollywood."[16][17]
Timeline – Hollywood Bowl and Pilgrimage Theatre
1916 – Hollywood's first outdoor theatre production takes place in nearby Beachwood Canyon.
1918 – First organizational meeting leads to plans for a permanent park and art center in Hollywood; Christine Wetherill Stevenson produces the religious drama, Light of Asia, on the grounds of the
Theosophical Society above Beachwood Canyon.
1919 – Theatre Arts Alliance incorporated, with Christine Wetherill Stevenson as president; purchase of 59 acres (24 ha) in Bolton Canyon for $47,500 on which to build a community park and art center.
1920 – Christine leaves the Theatre Art Alliance and purchases 29 acres (12 ha) of land on the other side of Cahuenga Pass to build a new amphitheater for her plays.[18]
1920 – Community Park and Art Association established, replacing Theatre Arts Alliance[19]
1922 – Christine Wetherill Stevenson dies
1929 – Fire destroys Pilgrimage Theatre and theatre rebuilt
^Pitt, Leonard; Pitt, Dale (1997). "Pilgrimage Play". Los Angeles A to Z (1 ed.). Los Angeles:
University of California Press.
^Christine Wetherill Steveson and Pilgrimage Play (photo essay), in "
Men, Women and Things in the World's News." Los Angeles, California: Los Angeles Evening Express, June 26, 1922, p. 19 (subscription required).