The Parkville Project Reviews

World Premiere Explores Rich Heritage of Hartford’s Parkville and Its People

Andrew Beck, Hartford Arts Examiner

Envision a manual typewriter gently falling from the sky guided by a silk parachute into a field of sugar cane.

That’s one of the chief images you’ll take home with you after viewing the world premiere production of  The Parkville Project, a new play by Michael Bradford being performed now through July 18 by the Bated Breath Theatre Company at the Playhouse on Park in West Hartford, Conn.  The aerial drop did actually happen, in Cuba in 1927 as depicted here, and in other countries as the Hartford-based Royal Typewriter Company thought that delivering their product via parachute to certain locations was the most timely and efficient method.  According to company historians, very few of the typewriters were ever damaged in the process.

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Parkville Project Tells Local Tale Of Immigration

Vanessa De La Torre, The Hartford Courant

HARTFORD/WEST HARTFORD— People now go to 150 New Park Ave. for groceries and the Redbox that dispenses DVD rentals for cheap.

But there was a time, long before the Super Stop & Shop, when the site belonged to the Royal Typewriter Co. and its ornate brick-and-mortar factory, where at one point more than 5,000 people reported to work. Nearby, on Arbor Street, was the home of the Underwood typewriter. Next to that building, was a Gothic-style factory that manufactured the first pay phones in the United States.

Each helped make Hartford’s Parkville a center of American industry in the early 1900s, and in turn, a magnet for immigrants seeking steady work.

That era in city history and today’s vehement immigration debate are presented in a new, 90-minute play called The Parkville Project that opened Wednesday and shows through Sunday, July 18, at West Hartford’s Playhouse on Park, less than a mile down the road from the Hartford neighborhood. The Bated Breath Theatre Company, whose founding members are all affiliated with the University of Connecticut, co-produced the work with Playhouse.

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