Broadway theatre | International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement | West End theatre | musical theatre | Royal National Theatre | theatre | Royal Court Theatre | Non-Aligned Movement | American Ballet Theatre | Musical theatre | National Theatre | Theatre Royal, Drury Lane | Bolshoi Theatre | Abbey Theatre | Haymarket Theatre | Theatre Royal | Play (theatre) | Union for a Popular Movement | Arts and Crafts movement | Globe Theatre | Theatre | Mariinsky Theatre | Manhattan Theatre Club | Lyric Theatre | Théâtre du Châtelet | Her Majesty's Theatre | Grand Théâtre de Genève | Théâtre des Champs-Élysées | Theatre 625 | Oxford Movement |
In 1915, the Neighborhood Playhouse, one of the first "Little Theatres", was created by the sisters Alice and Irene Lewisohn at the corner of Grand and Pitt Streets, offering classical drama for the people of the area.
He also enrolled part-time in graduate classes at the University of Chicago and developed a broad acquaintance among both literary and social activist circles, including lawyer Clarence Darrow, activist Emma Goldman, novelist John Cowper Powys, editor and publisher Margaret Anderson, writer Floyd Dell, Chicago Little Theatre founder Maurice Browne, and bookseller George Millard.