The Marsh

1062 Valencia St, San Francisco, CA 94110
The Marsh The Marsh is one of the popular Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) located in 1062 Valencia St ,San Francisco listed under Non-governmental organization (ngo) in San Francisco , Performance Art Theatre in San Francisco ,

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In 1989, Stephanie Weisman, the theater’s founder and artistic director, started The Marsh because she wanted a place for writers and performers like herself to easily develop their performances. It began as a Monday night performance series, just at the time when solo performance was taking off in San Francisco, and it was an immediate success. Every week, four different performers performed for fifteen minutes each at the legendary Hotel Utah, a historic drinking hole formerly frequented by gold miners and Beat poets.

Competition with Monday Night Football drove The Marsh to Morty’s in North Beach, the famous sixties hang-out where Lenny Bruce and Sarah Vaughn, among others, used to perform. Then, in 1990, The Marsh moved into the back room of the now defunct Café Beano on Valencia Street (now Café Ethiopia). Within a month, it was putting on seven performances a week. The first staged workshop was Marga Gomez’s Memory Tricks, Josh Kornbluth’s Haiku Tunnel was The Marsh’s first full-length production (and first feature film!) and Charlie Varon’s initial solo piece Honest Prophets saw its debut there.

After a short stint at the old Modern Times Bookstore location, in December 1992, The Marsh moved to its current home at 1062 Valencia. It rented the friendly, laid back, 112 seat theater formerly occupied by the jazz club Bajones (where, according to local lore, you could get a margarita on the rocks at six in the morning). In 1996 The Marsh purchased the whole building, gradually developing the 12,000 square foot space into a community arts center. It currently includes two theaters, a comedy club, a cafe and a youth theater.

The vision continues to evolve, most recently with the opening of a new theater in the Gaia Building in Berkeley’s thriving art district and in its developing relationships with other Bay Area theaters to present Marsh productions which include the Luther Burbank Center in Santa Rosa, the Dance Palace in Point Reyes, and the Sonoma Community Center.

So why is it called The Marsh? The name, The Marsh, a breeding ground for new performance, came out of several months Stephanie Weisman spent living in a house on stilts on the Delaware Bay. The teeming interplay of the marsh terrain and its vast fecundity seemed a perfect metaphor.

Map of The Marsh