In 1937, The Lost Colony, Paul Green's dramatic retelling of the
founding and mysterious disappearance of the Roanoke Island colony,
opened to standing-room-only audiences and rave reviews. Since then, the
beloved outdoor drama has played to more than 3 million people, and it
is still going strong. Produced by the Roanoke Island Historical
Association at the Waterside Theater near Manteo, North Carolina, The
Lost Colony has run for more than sixty summers almost without
interruption. (Production was suspended during World War II, when the
threat of German submarines prowling the coast made an extended blackout
necessary.)
The model for modern outdoor theater, The Lost Colony combines song,
dance, drama, special effects, and music to breathe life into shadowy
legend. This rendering of the play's text, edited and with an
introduction by Laurence Avery, brings this pioneering work back into
print.