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Broadway Center for the Performing Arts

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Headquarters
  
Washington, United States


Similar
  
University of Puget Sound, Seattle Symphony, Annie Wright School, Pacific Lutheran University, LeMay Family Collectio

Broadway Center for the Performing Arts is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization located in the historic Theater District (901 Broadway) of downtown Tacoma, Washington. Encompassing the Pantages, Rialto, and Theatre on the Square, the Broadway Center manages the largest complex of theaters between Seattle, Washington and Portland, Oregon. Additionally, The Broadway Center Conservatory and Education Department provide one of the largest performing arts education programs in Washington State.

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Since 1918, the Broadway Center has been host to many famous figures and world-class artists such as Franklin D. Roosevelt, Babe Ruth, Ronald Reagan, Hal Holbrook, Debbie Reynolds, Martin Short, Queen Latifah, Joan Rivers, Wanda Sykes and Colleen Ballinger/Miranda Sings.

Pantages Theater

The block now occupied by the Pantages Theater was once the site of a saloon, Tacoma's first library, and Tacoma's first department store. In 1908, William Jones of Walla Walla bought the block and razed the buildings. Soon after, Greek immigrant Alexander Pantages arrived in the northwest with dreams of owning a chain of beautiful vaudeville theaters across the country. Thanks to financial assistance from his mistress and business partner, “Klondike” Kate Rockwell, Pantages and Jones were able to raise the funds for the combination Jones Building and Pantages Theater, which cost $400,000.

Construction began in 1916, and the new Pantages Theater, the second of the Pantages chain, opened in January 1918. Often regarded as the most beautiful, the Tacoma Pantages was designed by Seattle architect B. Marcus Priteca after an ornate theater in the Palace of Versailles. The Tacoma Pantages served as a live theater for only eight years before being converted to a movie house and being sold to RKO, at which time the name was changed to the Orpheum. In 1932, the theater was purchased by Will Conner of Tacoma and was known as the Roxy until the 1980s when it was renamed the Pantages Theater.

A proposal to restore the Pantages as the cornerstone of a revitalized downtown area led to the restoration beginning in 1978 after the city bought the theater. On February 12, 1983, the Pantages Theater officially reopened, making 2005 its 22nd anniversary season, and its 87th birthday. Today it is the oldest of the Pantages Theaters still in operation.

Rialto Theater

Hailed as "the ultimate photoplay house," the Beaux-Arts style Rialto Theater opened September 7, 1918. Tacoma's Rialto was part of a national movie house chain and as such, the stage space, orchestra pit and dressing rooms were at a bare minimum. The lobby was also considerably smaller than what is present today.

These vaudeville-era theater architects concentrated on the auditorium, seeking acoustically successful theaters and concert halls as models for the ones they designed. The Rialto resembles Vienna's 1916 Redoutensaal, the first "shoe box" shaped orchestral hall. The original ornate plaster decorations include replicas of cupids and patriotic eagles, which remain in good shape today.

By the 1990s, when Tacoma and the Broadway Theater District took on the task of restoring the Rialto, it had become a run-down, second-run discount movie house. Today, it is once again an active player in the prosperity of downtown Tacoma.

Theatre on the Square

The third theater, Theatre on the Square, was designed by architects Broome, Oringdulph, O'Toole, Rudolf, Boles and Associates of Portland, Oregon, with Jones & Roberts Company of Lacey overseeing construction.

$11.8 million raised from private and public sectors provided the foundation for a revitalized theater district. Opened in October 1993, the 302-seat theater and a new rehearsal hall sit adjacent to the Pantages.

Theatre on the Square has full production capabilities including a rehearsal room, scene shop, costume shop, and storage areas.

1920s

  • Mae West
  • The Marx Brothers
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt
  • Harry Houdini
  • Bob Hope
  • Babe Ruth
  • Gene Tunney
  • 1930s

  • King Kong
  • Scarface
  • Mutiny on the Bounty
  • Top Hat
  • Modern Times
  • Gone with the Wind
  • The Wizard of Oz
  • 1940s

  • Ronald Reagan
  • Jack Benny
  • Hellzapoppin
  • Jack Dempsey
  • 1980s

  • Victor Borge
  • Diane Schuur
  • Marcel Marceau
  • Dizzie Gillespie
  • Hal Holbrook
  • Mark Russell
  • Myron Floren
  • Itzhak Perlman
  • Nikolai Arnoldovich Petrov
  • Glenn Miller Orchestra
  • 1990s

  • Alvin Ailey
  • Bill Maher
  • Dave Barry
  • Marvin Hamlisch
  • Victor Borge
  • Wynton Marsalis
  • Chick Corea
  • Gregory Peck
  • Debbie Reynolds
  • 2000s

  • Bob Newhart
  • Blind Boys of Alabama
  • David Sedaris
  • Garrison Keillor
  • Martin Short
  • Omara Portuondo
  • Queen Latifah
  • Doc Watson
  • Randy Newman
  • Treasure Island
  • Sleeping Beauty
  • My Fair Lady
  • Caution: Men at Work
  • RENT
  • Grease
  • Ricky Skaggs
  • Fiddler on the Roof
  • Spectrum Dance Co
  • Joan Baez
  • The Spencer's Theatre of Illusion
  • Josh Blue
  • Rush Limbaugh in Night School
  • Billy Joel and Twyla Tharp's Movin' Out
  • An Evening with Randy Cohen
  • Young King Arthur
  • Magic School Bus
  • Doyle's Cabaret
  • Footloose
  • James & Giant Peach
  • Chicago
  • PHANTOM
  • Ballet Folklorico
  • Mick Maloney
  • Newport Jazz 2002
  • Forbidden Broadway
  • Cinderella
  • Sleeping Beauty
  • Capitol Steps
  • South Sound Slam
  • Peking Acrobats
  • Yesterday: Beatles
  • Les Ballet Africains
  • The Sound of Music
  • Ballet Folklorico de Mexico
  • Seattle Men's Chorus
  • Ira Glass
  • Dave Barry
  • Guess How Much I Love You
  • Big Bad Voodoo Daddy
  • Tap Dogs
  • Hawaiian Slack Key
  • Soweto Gospel Choir
  • Urban Cowboy: The Musical
  • Out of Mist…A Dragon
  • Shanghai Acrobats
  • Gilbert & Sullivan's The Pirates of Penzance
  • If You Give a Mouse a Cookie
  • Sophisticated Ladies
  • Lee Greenwood
  • Pink Floyd Experience
  • Nobodies of Comedy
  • Mad Science: Newton's Revenge
  • Operation Homecoming
  • Peter Yarrow with Bethany and Rufus
  • Lavay Smith and Her Red Hot Skillet Lickers
  • Defending the Caveman
  • Strut Your Mutt
  • Sierra Leone's Refugee All Stars
  • Peter Pan: The High Flying Musical
  • Pine Leaf Boys
  • Highland Heath & Holler
  • The Wonder Bread Years
  • Four Slices of Wry
  • Cirqueworks Birdhouse Factory
  • Ragamala Music & Dance Theater
  • Dying To Be Thin
  • The Acting Company (The Tempest/Moby Dick "Rehearsed")
  • Not a Genuine Black Man
  • Garrison Keillor
  • Acia Gray & Tapestry Dance Company's Souls of Our Feet
  • Show Way
  • Woven Harmony
  • 3 Redneck Tenors: A New Musical Adventure
  • An Afternoon of Classic Lily Tomlin
  • Wilson's Joe Turner's Come and Gone
  • Do Jump!: Aerial Dance
  • Altar Boyz
  • Judy Collins with Tacoma Symphony Orchestra & Jonatha Brooke
  • Book-It Repertory Theatre's Even Cowgirls Get the Blues
  • An Evening with David Sedaris
  • An Evening with Martin Short
  • Scrooge: The Movie Musical
  • 2010s

  • Joan Rivers
  • Wanda Sykes
  • Ira Glass
  • Ladysmith Black Mambazo
  • Gaelic Storm
  • Smothers Brothers
  • Jo Dee Messina
  • Margaret Cho
  • Tito Puente Jr.
  • August Wilson's Seven Guitars
  • Nanci Griffith
  • Sweeney Todd: A Musical Thriller in Concert
  • Oregon Shakespeare Festival
  • Wayne Brady
  • Video Games Live
  • Colleen Ballinger/Miranda Sings
  • References

    Broadway Center for the Performing Arts Wikipedia