LONG ISLAND CITY’S SECRET THEATRE  
 PROVIDES ACCESS TO THOUSANDS OF ARTISTS 
 The Secret Theatre stages musicals such as Rent as well as dramas, dance, operas and film festivals. 
 BY BILL PARRY 
 When he immigrated from England  
 in 2004, Richard Mazda arrived in  
 Long  Island  City  as  an  accomplished  
 actor, director, producer, writer and  
 musician, and noticed something was  
 lacking in Queens. 
 “Back  then Long  Island City was  
 so different and I looked around and  
 noticed  there  was  no  real  theater,”  
 Mazda  said.  “I  knew  of  the  Thalia  
 Theatre  in  Sunnyside  but  I  didn’t  
 even know  there was a Queens Theatre  
 in  Flushing  Meadows  Corona  
 Park. I thought how could a borough  
 of more than 2.2 million there wasn’t  
 enough  theater  for  that  amount  of  
 people.  At  the  time  we  had  a  little  
 theater company at the Creek and the  
 Cave on Jackson Avenue, and I had a  
 hunch that the rezoning for an Olympic  
 Village  wouldn’t  work  and  next  
 thing  you  know  it  was  a  free-for-all  
 of a residential boom.” 
 Before  Long  Island  City  became  
 known  as  the  fastest  growing  neighborhood  
 in  the  country,  Mazda  
 opened  the  Secret  Theatre  in  2007  at  
 44-02  23rd  St.,  eventually  expanding  
 into a larger spot with room for a 100- 
 seat  theater  when  a  coffee  company  
 moved out of the property. The Secret  
 Theatre  had  its  growing  pains  along  
 the  way with  revenue  shortfalls,  but  
 Mazda  was  always  able  to  put  it  on  
 more stable ground through fundraising  
 efforts.  
 “The big problem was back then no  
 one  knew  Long  Island  City  existed,”  
 Mazda said. “We did a lot to improve  
 access  to  cultural  activities  in  the  
 neighborhood through the Secret Theatre  
 and the LIC Arts Open which will  
 return for its 10th year in May. We’re  
 trying to go gangbusters this year and  
 make it a real celebration.” 
 In  addition  to  providing  performance  
 space for plays, musicals,  
 dance, music,  opera,  film,  classes,  rehearsals, 
  art openings, parties, and  
 film  festivals,  Mazda  launched  The  
 Secret Theatre Academy for children  
 ages 6 to 17 in 2010. 
 “After giving access to thousands of  
 artists through the years we were able  
 to become the biggest theater school  
 in  the  borough,  and  the  only  theater  
 school  in  an  actual  theater,”  Mazda  
 said. “We have 70 to 80 kids each semester  
 PHOTOS COURTESY OF THE SECRET THEATRE 
 and in then we have eight weeks of  
 summer camp for a couple of hundred  
 kids.”  
 Young performers build confidence  
 and begin to develop skills as stage actors  
 and  performers  through  classes  
 such as musical theater, Broadway musical  
 theater and Broadway tap dance,  
 and drama theater. 
 “We also provide individual coaching  
 for those of our students preparing  
 them for prestigious performing arts  
 schools,” Mazda said. “So it’s the 10th  
 year of the Academy and the 10th year  
 of the LIC Arts Open, I guess you could  
 call it a decade of cultural activity.” 
 Reach reporter Bill Parry by e-mail  
 at  bparry@schnepsmedia.com  or  by  
 phone at (718) 260–4538. 
 A12     TIMESLEDGER, GUIDE TO QUEENS, SPRING/SUMMER 2020 TL TIMESLEDGER.COM 
 
				
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