In August 1962 Michael Locascio wrote A Corner of the Morning. It was La MaMa’s first original play to be performed.
Harold Pinter allowed La MaMa to produce his work in
In December 1962 La MaMa produced its first opera, created and conducted by Anthony Keller. The production was entitled The Flood.
Other original plays in the first season were Head Hunting by Korean playwright Pagoon Kang Wouk, Lazy Baby Susan by Leonard Melfi, The Collector by Kate Hoffman, Rococco Joker written by James Eliason and directed by Carlo Grasson. In that first season La MaMa did 17 plays.
In March 1964 The Allegation Impromtu by Lawrence Ferlinggetti was performed at La MaMa at
In June 1964 La MaMa had its first Coffeehouse Theatre Festival. The plays performed were The Recluse by Paul Foster and Who’s Afraid of Edward Albee by David Starkweather.
In August 1964 the Bogota Troupe played Paul Foster’s Hurrah for the Bridge which became Que Viva El Puente in Spanish at the Sheridan Playhouse. It was the first Off Broadway performance by a Latin American Troupe in Spanish.
In August 1965 the National Educational Television filmed Three Plays from La MaMa. They were Pavanne by Jean Claude Van Italie, Fourteen Hundred Thousand by Sam Shepard, and The Recluse by Paul Foster. Tom O’Horgan directed the entire program.
Ruth York was a patron of La MaMa, and she helped in La MaMa’s first tour in 1965 to
In October 1965 John Thompson directed The Typist by Murray Schisgal which was performed by La MaMa’s Theatre of the Blind. These performances with the Blind and workshops for blind artists were stopped by the public who expressed their opinion to the Lighthouse that the work was cruel and inhumane for the Blind to walk on a stage.
In October 1965 the Open Theatre came into residence at La MaMa. Their first show was called Open Theatre Improvisations.
La MaMa Plexus began in 1966 under the direction of Stanley Rosenberg and later was directed by Joel Zwick. Joel Zwick went on to direct many different films, including My Big Fat Greek Wedding and Fat Albert, as well as various television sitcoms, including Lavene and Shirley and Happy Days.
In May 1966 Viet Rock by Megan Terry was presented at La MaMa. It was the first anti-Vietnam play.
Larry Sacharow conceived and directed Concept with the Daytop Company in November 1967; the production went on to Broadway. The revenues of the Broadway production enabled the
In 1968 La MaMa did the first International Theatre Festival at
Trust, directed by Tom O’Horgan and with the La MaMa Troupe; Max Stafford-Clark and his company from