


St Petersburg City Theatre Incorporated Revenue
Artists and Writers • St Petersburg, Florida, United States • 1-10 Employees
St Petersburg City Theatre Incorporated revenue & valuation
| Annual revenue | $256,665 |
| Revenue per employee | $86,000 |
| Estimated valuation?This valuation is estimated based on industry average for the Artists and Writers industry and current estimated revenues | $821,328 |
| Total funding | No funding |
Key Contact at St Petersburg City Theatre Incorporated
Kari Kennedy
St Petersburg City Theatre Board Member - Vice President
Company overview
| Headquarters | 4025 31st St S, St Petersburg, Florida 33712, US |
| Website | |
| NAICS | 7111 |
| SIC | 792 |
| Keywords | Acting, Performing Arts, Community Theatre, Stage Crew |
| Founded | 1925 |
| Employees | 1-10 |
About St Petersburg City Theatre Incorporated
Founded as the Sunshine Players in 1925 during St. Petersburg’s big boom years, we became the Players Club in the late 1920’s and St. Petersburg Little Theatre in 1933. The name remained Little Theatre until 2011 when St. Petersburg City Theatre was adopted. City Theatre was incorporated as a non-profit organization in 1937 to promote and create local theatre dedicated to teaching and training non-professional artists of any age. The theatre’s goal of creating a vibrant theatre arts community in the area remains the central focus as it enters its 90th Season. Originally, plays were produced only for one or two nights. The first production produced by the Sunshine Players was The Poor Nut, a comedy in three acts by JC Nugent and Elliott Nugent. In the late 1930’s, an old grist mill on Second Avenue North was purchased. The new facility opened in June 1944. Throughout WWII servicemen both participated in and enjoyed shows at no cost, providing important rest and relaxation to the troops stationed locally. In the 1950’s, property was purchased at our present location on 31st Street South and was one of the first facilities in the Tampa Bay area to be erected as a theater. In September 1958, Teahouse of the August Moon became the first production in the new space, and the season was expanded to accommodate six plays. The 1960’s brought further growth and expansion with the production of City Theatre’s first musical, The Pajama Game along with a major renovation to the space. The costume room and green room were added to the building, and the original screened-in verandah was enclosed to form the lobby. In 1983, membership celebrated the burning of the mortgage on the property and building. In 1994, the last major renovation took place with a new restroom wing constructed to meet ADA standard.
Employees by Management Level
Total employees: 1-10
Seniority
Employees
Funding Data
St Petersburg City Theatre Incorporated has never raised funding before.
St Petersburg City Theatre Incorporated Tech Stack
Discover the technologies and tools that power St Petersburg City Theatre Incorporated's digital infrastructure, from frameworks to analytics platforms.
Fundraising & donations
Hosting
JavaScript libraries
CMS
Miscellaneous
Security
Video players
JavaScript frameworks
JavaScript frameworks
Miscellaneous
Frequently asked questions
4.8
40,000 users



