Wang Theatre Explained

Wang Theatre
Former Names:Metropolitan Theatre (1925–1962)
Music Hall (1962–1980)
Address:270 Tremont St.
Location:Boston, Massachusetts
Type:Theatre
Opened:1925
Owner:Boch Center
Operator:Boch Center
Madison Square Garden Company (co-booking)
Capacity:3,500
Embedded:
Embed:yes
Metropolitan Theatre
Coordinates:42.3503°N -71.0647°W
Built:1923
Architect:Blackall, Clapp & Whittemore; Multiple
Architecture:Renaissance
Added:December 9, 1980
Mpsub:Boston Theatre MRA
Refnum:80000445
Publictransit:Tufts Medical Center (Orange Line)
Boylston (Green Line)

The Wang Theatre is a theatre in Boston. It originally opened in 1925 as the Metropolitan Theatre and was later renamed the Music Hall. It was designed by Clarence Blackall and is located at 252–272 Tremont Street in the Boston Theatre District. The theatre is operated as part of the Boch Center. The theatre was designated as a Boston Landmark by the Boston Landmarks Commission in 1990.

Metropolitan Theatre

The structure was originally known as the Metropolitan Theatre when it opened in 1925.[1] The Metropolitan Theatre was developed by Max Shoolman and designed by architect Clarence Blackall, with the assistance of Detroit theatre architect C. Howard Crane. It seats more than 3,600 people.

Music Hall

In 1962 it became the home of the Boston Ballet and was renamed the Music Hall. During the 1960s and 1970s, audiences could see the Stuttgart Opera, the Metropolitan Opera, Bolshoi Ballet and Kirov Ballet as well as popular movies and performing artists. With time though, they could no longer attract the large touring companies because of the size of their stage as well as their outdated production facilities. Converted to a non-profit center in 1980 and renamed the Metropolitan Center, they were able to attract theatrical performances again.

Bob Marley and the Wailers' 1978 concert at the Music Hall was released in 2015 in honor of Bob Marley's 70th birthday as Easy Skanking in Boston '78.[2]

Wang Center

In 1983, Dr. An Wang made a very large donation and the Wang Center was born. From 1989–1992, $9.8 million was raised to restore the Theatre to "its glory days of the 1920s".[3] Boston based architecture firm Finegold Alexander & Associates restored the theatre with Conrad Schmitt Studios performing the elegant decoration, gilded moldings, murals, scagliola and marbleized surfaces.[4]

In 2008, the Citi Performing Arts Center announced a co-booking arrangement with The Madison Square Garden Company for the Wang Theatre.[5]

The lobby was used in the movies American Hustle, for the live band performance and casino scenes, and The Witches of Eastwick, as part of the house in which Jack Nicholson's character lived. It was also used for numerous scenes in the ABC TV pilot Gilded Lilys.[6]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Boston's Downtown Movie Palaces Images of America . Arthur J. Singer and Ron Goodman . Arcadia Publishing . 2011 . 9780738576312 . Metropolitan Theatre.
  2. Web site: Morse . Steve . 2023-02-17 . Marley concert from 1978 marks reggae legend’s 70th birthday - The Boston Globe . 2023-07-02 . BostonGlobe.com . en-US.
  3. http://www.citicenter.org/frame-the-center.html Wang Theatre History
  4. http://www.conradschmitt.com/portfolio/projects/?projectID=140 Project info
  5. Waddell . Ray . MSGE Expands Boston Footprint . Billboard . 2008-08-07 .
  6. http://www.bostonmovietours.net/jeff/Export1/BoxOffice/details/35.html The Witches of Eastwick