Ulster Performing Arts Center Upac the Broadway Theater 601 Broadway Kingston Ny

Ulster Performing Arts Center

Broadway Theater, Customs Theater

Ulster Performing Arts Center.jpg

Front portico of theater, viewed from west, 2008

Accost 601 Broadway
Kingston, NY
USA
Possessor Bardavon/UPAC Theaters
Designation NRHP #79001639[one]
Blazon Movie palace/vaudeville
Capacity i,500[2]
Electric current employ Musical performances
Construction
Opened 1927
Reopened 2002
Architect Douglas P. Hall
Tenants
Hudson Valley Philharmonic
Website
www.bardavon.org/

The Ulster Performing Arts Center (UPAC), originally the Broadway Theater and Community Theatre, is located on Broadway in Kingston, New York, Usa. A Classical Revival building congenital in 1926, it is the simply unaltered pre-Globe War 2 theater left in the city, and 1 of simply three from that era in the Hudson Valley.[3] It is too the largest proscenium theater between Manhattan and Albany.[ii]

Information technology was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979,[1] ii years after it was closed due to failing business. It remained vacant until an all-encompassing renovation effort tardily in the 20th century allowed it to reopen in 2002. Today it is operated by the Bardavon Theater in nearby Poughkeepsie. While information technology served primarily every bit a picture show palace in its earlier incarnation, today it primarily hosts musical performances. The Hudson Valley Philharmonic calls it home due to its superior acoustics, and many pop recording artists have fabricated UPAC a finish on their concert tours.

Building [edit]

The theater is on a half-acre (2,000 thou²) lot on the south side of Broadway in the center of the city, midway between its uptown and downtown sections. Broadway is mainly commercial; the neighborhoods behind the theater are residential.[3]

Exterior [edit]

At the street, its northeast (main) facade is two stories high past xi bays wide. The rear, theater portion rises iii to four stories, dominating the block. The entire edifice is made of brick, with a granite-capped parapet with Aztec designs along the front roofline.[3]

Plain granite pilasters mark the corners. The portico features four Corinthian columns and a classical entablature. Other decoration includes projecting stone chugalug-courses, granite rectangles between the windows, vertical stretchers above windows and granite aprons below.[3]

Interior [edit]

The interior is congenital around the auditorium. It is semicircular, with an orchestra pit below the phase. The main seats and balcony provide i,500 seats. The stage itself is 76 anxiety (23 m) wide and 33 feet (10 m) deep.[3]

The proscenium arch, ascent to 40 feet (12 chiliad) above the phase floor, is busy with alternating octagons, foliated candelabras and other foliate motifs. On either side information technology has fluted Corinthian pilasters and engaged columns with Adamesque carvings in the surrounding walls. Information technology is topped past a highly detailed entablature, its cornice busy with lions' heads, anthemion leaves, dentils and egg-and-dart molding. The frieze features steer skulls, candelabras, shields and swag.[three]

Similar decoration continues on the shallow ceiling dome. It is coffered, with plain and busy grillwork and solid recessed panels with dentils, anthemion leaves and other foliate molding. Rosettes mark the interstices. Around the central recess is a wide band with urns, rosettes and cartouches bordered by rinceau and foliate triangles. The rim has lions' heads and anthemion. The plaster walls are less decorated, using only elementary rectangles.[3]

The inner entrance hall has ornamentation incorporating both the aforementioned themes as the auditorium and the Aztec motifs outside. The 2nd-flooring lounge continues this mix, with a fireplace surrounded by carved rock. Other areas, such equally the outer lobby, restrooms, and dressing rooms, are obviously.[3]

History [edit]

The theater'south history begins in 1925, when a Kingston couple and an Albany man incorporated with $5,300 ($82,000 in gimmicky dollars[4]). The next year they acquired the land and began selling bonds to raise more coin. They hired prominent New York City builder Douglas P. Hall. That October, construction began with Sinner and Melt, also of New York, as general contractor.[3]

Construction connected through the wintertime. The largest derrick in the land at that fourth dimension was used to put the steel framing in place for the auditorium and proscenium arch. Upon its thou opening in June 1927 as the Broadway Theatre the Daily Freeman chosen it "one of the finest theatres in the Hudson River Valley". The program shown to the chapters crowd of 1,703 included five vaudeville acts and Howard Hawks' comedy The Cradle Snatchers. The ushers wore Spanish costumes to complement the decor. A schedule of iii daily performances began the next 24-hour interval.[3]

Past 1947 information technology had inverse owners three times. The Walter Reade system bought it that year and renamed it the Community Theatre. Six years later, in 1953, the front portico was added. Inside, the original floor seats were replaced and a political party box added, reducing the capacity to 1,560.[3]

The theater continued to exist a major part of the city'due south cultural life. Bette Davis and Lillian Gish were amongst the actors who performed on stage. Musical greats included Isaac Stern and Victor Borge, who praised the theater's acoustics.[3]

Kingston's downtown began to decline with growing suburbanization in the 1970s. In 1977 the Reade arrangement closed the theater, citing contest for moviegoers from suburban shopping malls with multiple screens. To avert the building's possible demolition, a nonprofit organization, the Ulster Performing Arts Eye, was formed and bought the theater.[3]

In 1995, the nonprofit raised the money for a $1.7 million renovation, completed in time for the building'southward 75th ceremony in 2002. The Bardavon began managing UPAC in 2006 and the two organizations merged the following twelvemonth.[2]

See also [edit]

  • National Register of Historic Places listings in Ulster County, New York

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b "National Register Data Organization". National Annals of Historic Places. National Park Service. Apr 15, 2008.
  2. ^ a b c "The History of the Broadway Theater". Bardavon Theater. Archived from the original on September 24, 2010. Retrieved August 9, 2009.
  3. ^ a b c d e f thousand h i j 1000 fifty m Sharp, Townley McElhiney (April iii, 1979). "National Annals of Historic Places nomination, Community Theatre". New York State Part of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Archived from the original on June 16, 2012. Retrieved August 9, 2009.
  4. ^ 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Alphabetize for Utilise every bit a Deflator of Money Values in the Economic system of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antique Lodge. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Utilize as a Deflator of Coin Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Club. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Depository financial institution of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Alphabetize (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved April sixteen, 2022.

External links [edit]

  • Bardavon/UPAC Theaters

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulster_Performing_Arts_Center

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