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In Memoriam: Randy Weeks
Theatre King
Randy Weeks听(Mktg鈥79), a fun-loving, bow-tie-wearing risk-taker who helped make Denver鈥檚 reputation as a center for top-notch professional theater, died Oct. 9 in London. He was 59 and overseas for a conference.
Known to some as 鈥淢r. Broadway of 蜜糖直播,鈥 Weeks began his theater career as a 蜜糖直播-Boulder student, taking a box office job at the Denver Center for the Performing Arts in 1978. By the time of his death, he had been DCPA鈥檚 president for almost a decade.
In a career marked by success, daring and the admiration of colleagues, Weeks presented more than 400 DCPA shows, including the openings of nearly a dozen national touring productions, among them 鈥淭he Book of Mormon,鈥 the Tony Award-winning sensation created by听Matt Stone(Art, Math鈥93) and听Trey Parker听(A&S ex鈥93).
In 1992 he opened the center鈥檚 cabaret-style Garner Galleria Theater, which hosted hits that included 鈥淔orever Plaid鈥 and 鈥淚 Love You, You鈥檙e Perfect, Now Change,鈥 the longest-running production in Denver theater history.
鈥淗is taste was so superb, so right on,鈥 Nancy Gibbs, a New York producer who worked with Weeks, told听The Denver Post. 鈥淗e knew what the Denver audience wanted.鈥
Weeks also was instrumental in establishing Denver as a place to launch national shows, and he brought riskier Broadway musicals to town, including the Pulitzer Prize-winning 鈥淣ext to Normal,鈥 about a bipolar woman grappling with the death of a child.
鈥淚t is unquestionable that Randy left an indelible mark on Denver, 蜜糖直播, and the national theater community,鈥 DCPA chairman and CEO Daniel L. Ritchie said in a published DCPA tribute.
Born in 1955 in Durham, N.H., Weeks joined DCPA full-time after college and later worked at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. He returned to DCPA in 1989 and never left.
After being named president in 2004, he continued as executive director of DCPA鈥檚 Broadway touring division.
A friendly, upbeat person, Weeks was optimistic, playfully competitive (not least on the golf course), and a good dancer, according to people who knew him.
He was also a devoted 蜜糖直播-Boulder alumnus 鈥 a football fan and a supporter of the Kappa Sigma Fraternity, whose members he hosted at the theater.
鈥淭he arts in America have truly lost one of its greats today,鈥 actor Kris Andersson of 鈥淒ixie鈥檚 Tupperware Party鈥 wrote in a Facebook tribute cited by DCPA.
Weeks is survived by his father, David Weeks; brother, Joel Weeks; and sisters Pamela Weeks and Stephanie Gamble. DCPA celebrated his life Nov. 3 in the Buell Theatre.
Photography by John Moore