Suvarna Garge (Editor)

East Pyongyang Grand Theatre

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Location
  
Pyongyang, North Korea

Address
  
North Korea, Pyongyang

Surface area
  
6 ha

Built
  
1989 (1989)

Opened
  
1989

Capacity
  
2,500

East Pyongyang Grand Theatre

Similar
  
Mansudae Art Theater, People's Palace of Culture, International Cinema Hall, April 25 House of Culture, Grand People's Study Ho

East pyongyang grand theatre


The East Pyongyang Grand Theatre is a 2,500-seat theatre located in the North Korean capital, Pyongyang. It was the site of the 2008 concert by the New York Philharmonic, which was the first significant cultural visit to North Korea by the United States since the Korean War.

The hall was built in 1989 and is normally a venue for performances that celebrate North Korea's dynastic leaders and national achievements, and "revolutionary operas that depict North Korea's struggles in song and dance." The December before the concert, it had hosted an opera honoring Kim Jong-suk, the mother of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il.

On New Year's Day 2007, following reconstruction, the theatre hosted the Mansudae Art Troupe. Its "massive" stage needed an acoustic shell built to properly project the orchestra's sound. The theatre was specifically chosen by Zarin Mehta, who rejected the home of the North Korea State Symphony as too small.

The overall size is more than 62,000 square meters. A collonated great hall (lobby) includes a mural of Ulrim Falls. According to a Reuters journalist, its architecture is "bland communist", and a "hulking, ramshackle structure the locals struggle to keep heated and lit at night."

References

East Pyongyang Grand Theatre Wikipedia