New Century Theatre: Difference between revisions

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*1929: ''[[Naughty Marietta (operetta)|Naughty Marietta]]''
*1929: ''[[Naughty Marietta (operetta)|Naughty Marietta]]''
*1932: ''[[A Midsummer Night's Dream]]''
*1932: ''[[A Midsummer Night's Dream]]''
*1937: ''[[The Cradle Will Rock]]''
*1944: ''[[Follow the Girls]]''
*1944: ''[[Follow the Girls]]''
*1947: ''[[High Button Shoes]]''
*1947: ''[[High Button Shoes]]''

Revision as of 11:07, 18 January 2009

The New Century Theatre was a legitimate Broadway theatre located at 932 Seventh Avenue at West 58th Street in midtown Manhattan.

The house, which seated 1700, was designed by architect Herbert J. Krapp for the Shuberts, who originally named it Jolson's 59th Street Theatre after Al Jolson, who opened the venue with a Sigmund Romberg musical called Bombo on October 6, 1921. Two years later, it hosted the American premiere of Stanislavski's Moscow Art Theatre.

The theatre underwent several name changes over the next several years. As the Central Park Theatre, it was operated as a movie house. It then became the Shakespeare Theatre, the Molly Picon Theatre, the Venice, and twice reverted to its original name honoring Jolson before finally being refurbished and reopened as the New Century on April 8, 1944.

Its place in theatrical history was established in 1937 when Orson Welles and his acting troupe marched their production of The Cradle Will Rock into the theatre and performed it from seats in the audience in defiance of Actors Equity.

The theatre was shuttered in 1954 and demolished in 1962.

Notable productions