From the Air Force to the theater

Henry Lowenstein

Henry Lowenstein

When the Korean War breaks out in 1950, Henry joins the US Air Force. During his three years of service, he works as an artist and illustrator at Chanute Air Force Base in Illinois. Thanks to the commanding general there, he is able to take college classes at the University of Illinois. The general encourages recruits to pursue an education and expand their horizons beyond the military. It is here that Henry begins to work in theater, cultivating the seeds that had been sown by his childhood exposure to the theater scene in prewar Berlin. During this time, he also meets Doris Brewer, whom he marries in 1952. Together, they have three sons.

After his discharge in 1953, Henry attends Yale University Drama School, earning the equivalent of an MFA despite not having completed an undergraduate degree. He goes on to work in theater in New Haven, Connecticut, where he is later recruited by Helen Bonfils to design shows for the Bonfils Theatre in Denver, Colorado. Henry and Doris and their first son, David, relocate to Denver in 1956. Henry begins a 30-year career at the Bonfils, which is renamed the Lowenstein Theater in his honor in 1985. Post-retirement, he continues to produce plays for the Denver Civic Theatre until 1995.

Henry’s mother, Maria, eventually finds her way back to her art, landing a faculty position at Bucknell University in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. His sister, Karin, moves to New York, where she works at the Museum of Natural History. Karin marries James Wharton, whom she had first met in Berlin where he was working for the State Department. Wharton was instrumental in getting the Lowensteins out of Germany after the war. After the death of Karin’s husband in the mid-1960’s, Karin and Maria both move to Denver to be nearer to Henry.

Maria Lowenstein, charcoal portrait of Henry Lowenstein in uniform, c. 1950

Courtesy of Beck Archives, University Libraries, University of Denver

Henry installing a stage set

Courtesy of John Moore, Denver Center for the Performing Arts [Permission pending]

Henry at the Lowenstein theater

Courtesy of John Moore, Denver Center for the Performing Arts [Permission pending]

Doris passes away in 1990 following a battle with cancer. In 1994, Henry remarries, to Deborah Goodman. In 1999, Henry is selected to attend a ceremony of the British Parliament commemorating the 60th anniversary of the Kindertransport.

Throughout his career, Henry is dedicated to fighting discrimination, having himself experienced what it is like to be considered a second-class citizen. “I really was instrumental in bringing the various races together and opening the doors to everybody … at a time when a lot of otherwise perfectly nice people did not see that as a priority.” In 2008, the annual awards of the Colorado Theater Guild are renamed “the Henrys” in his honor. Henry Lowenstein passes away in October 2014 at the age of 89. His lasting legacy in the history of the performing arts in Denver earns him the honorary title of “the father of Denver theater.”

Henry Lowenstein and Deborah Goodman at the 2013 Henry Awards

Courtesy of John Moore, Denver Center for the Performing Arts [Permission pending]

Henry Lowenstein's Timeline

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