Celebrating Guy
Sullivan icon turns 80
by Joash Tiarks
Reporting in Sullivan
“Walk on through the wind,
Walk on through the rain,
Tho’ your dreams be tossed and blown.
Walk on, walk on with hope in your heart
And you’ll never walk alone,
You’ll never walk alone.”
- Carousel, ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’
A successful Broadway musical production and its poetic lyrics may not relate all that easily to the daily life of your average central Illinois resident, being far removed from the lights
and bustle of New York.
However, your average resident of Sullivan, Ill. could likely recall fun times with friends over food and drinks at Jibby’s restaurant, formerly just off the square from the county courthouse. At first glance a connection between Broadway productions in New York and Jibby’s in Sullivan might be hard to make. But that is before taking into account the life and work of Guy S. Little, who turned 80 this month, and his love for the theater.
Born in 1935 to a local farm manager and a former high school English teacher, Guy attended his first stage performance at age five when his mother Inis who herself directed high school plays out of a love for the theater, took him to the Lincoln Theatre in Decatur to see ‘The Merry Widow.’
“I was hooked, enthralled,” declared Little. “From that moment I knew what I wanted to do.”
This turned out to be no passing infatuation.
Guy would wholeheartedly pursue his passion for the stage from Sullivan to New York and New Jersey, to Miami, back across the midwest and out to Arizona, eventually owning a theater and a playhouse here in central Illinois. In addition he produced shows and managed theaters in Milwaukee and Phoenix and in numerous theatrical tours across the country, hosting hundreds of Broadway and Hollywood stars along the way.
Family legend tells of of how he produced his first play, ‘Hansel and Gretel’, at the age of nine with a set of marionette puppets in the backyard; of his wild night ride from New York to New Jersey with James Dean and the few days they roomed together while working in summer stock shows on the east coast as a teen on summer break from high school.
“He was very reserved and kept mostly to himself,” Guy remembers, “but he drove like a maniac!”
These experiences, intertwined with years of piano, vocal, and language lessons from local patron Winifred Titus Sentel in that formative time, developed and matured into a deep love of musical theater. This led him to attend the University of Miami for their unique combined theater and music program where, as a result of Sentel’s training, his previous experience, and his unique and powerful high tenor voice, he was able to secure a full scholarship for the three years it took him to complete his degree.
Ready to take on the world, Guy spent some time off Broadway in New York then returned to central Illinois in 1957, cultivating a dream of running a musical theater himself. Even for someone with his credentials and experience, being in his early 20’s, Guy found only closed doors. He caught a break when the owner of the Grand Theatre in Sullivan, a silent movie house at the time, closed the doors in favor of his nearby drive-in theatre. A lease was agreed upon for that first summer, and Guy produced nine musicals in 10 weeks, thus marking the first ever “Summer of Musicals” in Sullivan.
The dream was becoming tangible, but it was only possible with the incredible support of Guy’s family. In addition to financial backing, Guy Sr. worked as the business manager and his mother Inis as box office manager for the theatre. Guy’s then-wife, Jerili, whom he had met while studying in Miami, starred in at least eight shows over the years and filled numerous other supporting roles. Their two children Vanessa and Sean also got in on the act, literally.
“I was quite active. I sang and danced; I did posters for the theatre,” Vanessa remembers. “It was an unusual upbringing, very creative, very musical.”
“We both spent time on the stage as children.” added Sean. “It was a remarkable education...interfacing with such a variety of people... it taught me to be tolerant of others, to be personable.”
But the real test would be longevity.
Guy later shared in an interview for the WILL program ‘Illinois Pioneers’, with Mark Leonard, that he wanted his creation to last for 40 years. And in 1963, with five seasons of shows under his belt, that dream was one step closer to fruition when Guy and his family purchased the Grand outright. He then changed the name to The Little Theatre On The Square, not after the size of the building, but after his family name, of course. Over the next 15 years Guy would produce an average of 12 shows a year, bringing in nearly 150 stars and hundreds more apprentices, all descending on Sullivan.
Today’s generation might not readily recognize these famous names from this bygone era, names such as Betty Grable, Pat O’Brien, Robert Conrad, Mickey Rooney, Leonard Nimoy, or Margaret Hamilton to name but a few;
however, most would likely recognize the face and character of ‘Spock’ from the original Star Trek, played by Nimoy, as well as the Wizard of Oz’s iconic ‘Wicked Witch of the West’, which Hamilton played. Yet these and many others came at Guy’s request to perform for the masses on the ‘Little’ stage in rural Illinois.
At the time, The Little Theatre On The Square was the the only professional theater (with Actors’ Equity Association contracts) between Chicago and St. Louis, between Indianapolis and Kansas City.
The late and then local bar owner Julio “Jibby” Florini, according to Guy, was originally very skeptical of the idea.
“It’ll never work,” Little recalls Florini saying emphatically. Years later, after his simple establishment was transformed into the popular restaurant known throughout the region for many years as Jibby’s, he changed his tune: “Guy, you made me a rich man!”
But Florini’s place was not the only business on the scene to prosper.
Bob and Marion Best, whose family currently owns and runs the News•Progress, were living on the east coast in the early 60’s, looking to purchase and invest in a small town newspaper. Indecision reigned until one evening Jack Haskell, a TV actor and singer, appeared on the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson, explaining how he would be going to Sullivan, Ill. for the summer to star in the musical ‘Brigadoon’ at The Little Theatre on the Square.
“My mom (Marion) had said that wherever we were to go, there needed to be culture,” explained daughter Kathy Best, currently Editor in Chief of the Seattle
Times. “The fact that there was a theater in Sullivan was why my family ended up there.”
“Guy S. Little Jr. put Sullivan on the map,” said Sean, a statement echoed by Best.
“It’s a small town that has been written about regionally, even internationally,” she said. “It’s not just an average small town.”
“Guy was doing great shows, and he was able to bring in the stars for added spotlight,” said current executive director and producer at The Little Theatre John Stephens. “The theatre is a vital part of the community.”
The theatre did go dark one season in 1980, and the following year the non-profit group Friends of the Little Theatre, took over and leased the building from Guy. Since then, the non-profit reorganized in the early 90s, becoming known as the The Little Theatre on the Square Inc. and purchased the building. Since the non-profit took over, shows have continued to be produced, leading up to this year’s upcoming 58th season.
Time does not allow for a chronicle of the numerous ways Sullivan has benefited from the realization of Guy’s passion and dream. The Little Theatre on the Square has been bringing patrons and actors to Sullivan for decades from neighboring towns, neighboring states, and even from neighboring countries, as in the case of
Aniko Ferrel Palmer of Canada, wife of actor Peter Palmer.
“Guy is a genius in his own right,” said Lee York, music director at the Little Theatre from 1962-68 and current resident of Tuscola, “an entrepreneur before the word was popular.”
“Guy changed Sullivan, Ill.”, added York. “He brought people in from all over.
“He really helped the economy; you can’t overstate the impact,” said Sean.
“Everyone (of that generation) would have stories to tell of meeting people associated with the theatre,” added Best.
In fitting recognition, Guy received the first ever Lifetime Achievement Award from the Sullivan Chamber and Economic Development(SCED) in 2013 for his indelible impact in this town his family has called home for generations. Stepheny McMahon, director of the SCED stated at the ceremony, “When Guy started the theatre, he had a personal goal that it last for 40 years. Now 55 years later, the Little Theatre on the Square is still producing world class productions for audiences of all ages.”
“I am very proud and very honored,” Guy shared of the event.
In addition to his theater in Sullivan, Little also had the Piccolo Playhouse in Joliet, Ill., produced for nine years at the Melody Top Theatre in Milwaukee, Wis., and managed the Sombrero Playhouse in Phoenix, Ariz., along with numerous tours throughout the midwest and along the east coast.
“I have done it all,” Guy recollects. “I’ve been around the block a bit.”
Guy is still a regular attender at the Little Theatre in Sullivan, purchasing season tickets each year for every opening performance, often for the closing matinee as well.
“Front row, center stage,” he insists, “so I can see everything that’s going on.
“I still love the theatre very, very much,” he emphasized, “I am just not up to the demands of being involved.”
After all his varied exposure, Guy settled back in his family home, which he cleverly named The Little House on the Prairie, successfully running a small bed and breakfast for 13 years, until declining health made it impossible to continue. This house is now a veritable temple to the performing arts, filled with innumerable photos and memorabilia of a life lived on and around the stage, as near to Broadway as one could get in central Illinois. Now somewhat stooped with age, battling time and illness, Guy still regularly corresponds with many of the stars he befriended through the years. And though celebrating his 80th birthday earlier this month, he still readily breaks into song with his commanding tenor voice, ringing out with the stanzas of beloved songs ingrained in the soul of this visionary artist.
“...omma the most happy fella, In the whole Napa Valley, In the whole Napa Valley, The most happy fella, that’s me!”(from the song ‘The Most Happy Fella’ in the musical of the same name, by Frank Loesser).