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New Amsterdam Theatre

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The New Amsterdam Theatre is a Broadway theatre located at 214 West 42nd Street in the heart of Times Square in New York City. It was built in 1903 by the partnership of impresarios A.L. Erlanger and Marcus Klaw and designed in the Art Nouveau style by architects Herts and Tallant. At the time of construction, it was the largest theatre in New York with a seating capacity of 1,702. Along with the Lyceum Theatre, also built in 1903, it is the oldest surviving Broadway venue.

The New Amsterdam opened in November 1903 with a production of Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream. For many years, it hosted the Ziegfeld Follies, showcasing such talents as Olive Thomas, Fanny Brice and the Eaton siblings. A racier sister show of the Follies, the Midnight Frolics, played in the New Amsterdam's roof garden theatre.

The Great Depression took its toll on the theatre business, and in 1936 the New Amsterdam closed. It reopened on a limited basis in 1937 but soon was converted to a movie theatre. The Nederlander Organization purchased the landmark property in 1982, but it would not be on the road to rehabilitation for another eight years. In 1990, after a court battle, the State and City of New York assumed ownership of the New Amsterdam and many other theatres on 42nd Street. The Walt Disney Company signed a lease for the property in 1993. The theatre, which had recently been used as a filming location for the movie Vanya on 42nd Street, was in shambles; it would take several years and millions of dollars, to restore it to its original usage and grandeur.

The New Amsterdam was officially reopened on April 2, 1997. In November 1997, after the premiere of the film Hercules and a limited engagement of a concert version of King David, Disney's stage version of The Lion King opened. As of June 4, 2006, it was still playing. On June 13, The Lion King will move to the Minskoff Theatre. Mary Poppins is scheduled to begin previews at the New Amsterdam in October 2006 for a November opening. [link]

The New Amsterdam has also hosted events benefitting Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS, including the annual Easter Bonnet Competition. In recent years, the benefit's honored guest has been centenarian Doris Eaton Travis, who originally performed on the New Amsterdam stage in the Ziegfeld Follies of 1919.

External links and references

     
Broadway theatre
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SHUBERT: Ambassador Theatre | Ethel Barrymore Theatre | Belasco Theatre | Booth Theatre | Broadhurst Theatre | The Broadway Theatre | Cort Theatre | John Golden Theatre | Imperial Theatre | Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre | Longacre Theatre | Lyceum Theatre | Majestic Theatre | Music Box Theatre (joint operation) | Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre | Shubert Theatre | Winter Garden Theatre
NEDERLANDER: Brooks Atkinson Theatre | George Gershwin Theatre | Lunt-Fontanne Theatre | Marquis Theatre | Minskoff Theatre | Nederlander Theatre | Neil Simon Theatre | Palace Theatre | Richard Rodgers Theatre
JUJAMCYN: Al Hirschfeld Theatre | Walter Kerr Theatre | Eugene O'Neill Theatre | St. James Theatre | August Wilson Theatre
ROUNDABOUT: American Airlines Theatre | Studio 54
OTHER: Vivian Beaumont Theatre | Biltmore Theatre | Circle in the Square Theatre | Helen Hayes Theatre | Hilton Theatre | New Amsterdam Theatre

 


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