Curt Columbus, Artistic Director of Trinity Rep, to Step Down Next Fall After 20 Years

Columbus has served as the Providence theater company’s artistic director since 2006

The Trinity Repertory Company is based at the Lederer Theater Center in downtown Providence.
The Trinity Repertory Company is based at the Lederer Theater Center in downtown Providence.
Courtesy Trinity Repertory Company
Share
The Trinity Repertory Company is based at the Lederer Theater Center in downtown Providence.
The Trinity Repertory Company is based at the Lederer Theater Center in downtown Providence.
Courtesy Trinity Repertory Company
Curt Columbus, Artistic Director of Trinity Rep, to Step Down Next Fall After 20 Years
Copy

The longtime artistic director of Providence’s Trinity Repertory theater company plans to step down next fall, the theater company announced Wednesday.

Curt Columbus has led the theater group since 2006, directing more than 25 productions. He is also a playwright.

In a statement, Columbus said it is “time for new adventures, for me and for Trinity Repertory Company.”

“I firmly believe that every artistic endeavor needs renewal and revitalization,” Columbus said. “While I could stay at Trinity Rep forever, the health of the theater and its artistry depends upon this kind of change.”

Trinity Rep says it is conducting a national search for a new artistic director.

Founded in 1963, Trinity Rep’s annual production of A Christmas Carol is a holiday mainstay in Rhode Island’s arts scene. The company produces several plays each season, including new works, and it received the Tony Award for Outstanding Regional Theater in 1981.

USDA says it will not send out food stamp money in November due to the federal shutdown. Now, Rhode Islanders are grappling with how to make ends meet
Federal cuts to Medicaid could leave up to 50,000 Rhode Islanders without health insurance, straining the state’s already limited primary care system and putting communities like Central Falls - where half the population relies on Medicaid - at particular risk, according to Dr. Michael Fine
Gov. Dan McKee says the state will shift $6 million from other federal programs to help feed Rhode Islanders as SNAP benefits run out — while Attorney General Peter Neronha joins a multistate lawsuit against the Trump administration to restore funding
The R/V Endeavor, which spent the last 49 years operating out of URI’s Narragansett Bay Campus, was retired last month. Possibly took a tour of the vessel before it’s decommissioned
New protections for federal workers, credits for low-income customers on the way
Rescheduling after federal stop-work order puts two dozen laborers out of work