The Music Hall (Portsmouth)

Coordinates: 43°4′33.0″N 70°45′34.1″W / 43.075833°N 70.759472°W / 43.075833; -70.759472 The Music Hall is a 895-seat theater located at 28 Chestnut Street in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, in the United States. Built in 1878, The Music Hall claims to be the oldest operating theater in New Hampshire and the 14th oldest in the United States. An independent venue that offers music, readings, dance, and cinema, The Music Hall brings in 90,000 visitors a year.[1] In the past it has hosted musicians like Suzanne Vega and authors like Dan Brown.

History

In 1878 a group of Seacoast residents, including a banker, a railroad executive, a lawyer, a housewife, and a clergyman, all members of the prominent Peirce family, joined together to rebuild Portsmouth’s only venue for entertainment, which had burned to the ground the year before. “The Temple”, as the theater was called, had once been a Baptist meetinghouse and, before that, the site of the country’s first almshouse, as well as a prison. The land surrounding the charred lot was owned by the family.

Following the fire on Christmas Eve of 1876, the Peirces knew what we still hold to be true, “a community is known to some extent by the character and place of its amusements,” a sentiment echoed on the opening night in a speech by Sen. W.H.Y. Hackett. The opening celebration on January 30, 1878, was followed by the sold-out performance of two well-known British farces, Caste and John Wopps, brought up from Boston.

For the next few decades The Music Hall brought the community opera, drama, dance and traditional vaudeville fare from as far away as Europe and as close as Portsmouth's own community players. The famed D'Oyly Carte Opera Company (Gilbert and Sullivan) performed The Pirates of Penzance within weeks of its US premiere, and countless Shakespearean actors known around the world graced The Music Hall stage, including Margaret Mather, Thomas W. Keene and John Drew. Buffalo Bill Cody and his Wild West Show performed their smaller indoor show numerous times, and Portsmouth saw its very first moving pictures on Edison’s Graphophone here in 1898.

Broadway was well represented, with performances of Peter Pan, The Wizard of Oz and No, No, Nanette among many other shows that came to the theater within the first weeks of leaving “The Great White Way” in New York City. As is true today, The Music Hall was also dedicated to providing support for local organizations to raise money and awareness through the arts. Groups such as the Masons, the Portsmouth Athletic Club and The Chase Home for Children produced local benefits to raise money for their various causes.

In 1901 The Music Hall’s new owner, the politician-brewer-railroad baron Frank Jones, envisioned and executed its first renovation. The theater, now endowed with a proscenium arch and stage house, remained a central feature of the downtown area through the mid-1920s.

Between the world wars The Music Hall remained the home of community events and high school graduations, but fewer traveling shows were presented. Moving pictures became the primary entertainment draw for residents of Portsmouth. Though adapted for film showing, the theater could not compete with the three venues created in the 1910s expressly for that purpose, and went through a period of partial closings that lasted until a Kittery man purchased the building in 1945 at auction and renamed the hall “The Civic”.

For almost four decades audiences watched the stars of the screen ranging from John Wayne to John Barrymore and were able to catch up on the latest newsreels or episodes of their favorite serial. By the mid-1960s, the Hall had been leased to movie palace mogul E.M. Loew and operated in tandem with his other theatre, The Colonial, in Market Square. Though relegated to showing some of the less popular film titles, The Civic remained a favored venue for the Portsmouth community until it was sold to a holding company in the early 1980s when it was considered “too old” to be of any use to Loew.

After another brief period of closure and trip to the auction block, The Music Hall was once again re-opened. Thanks to the generosity, hard work and foresight of a group of concerned residents known as The Friends of The Music Hall, who followed in the footsteps of the Peirce Family of more than a century before, the theater emerged as a non-profit center for the performing arts.

Now the only remaining venue of its kind in Portsmouth, The Music Hall operates as it did in 1878, bringing the region world-class entertainment, both live and on film, and providing a meeting place for members of the community. In recent years the theater has welcomed such stars as Wynton Marsalis, Alan Alda, Patti LuPone, John Updike and Crosby & Nash. Grammy, Tony and Pulitzer Prize winners have graced the stage in performances unique to the region. As it has for five generations, The Music Hall continues to serve the greatest variety of audiences, cultural and not-profit partners.

Restoration project

In 2003, The Music Hall was named an "American Treasure" under a program sponsored by the National Park Service and the National Trust for Historic Preservation, which allowed the organization to collect a large federal grant to begin restoration work.[2] Armed with $395,000 in grant money from the federal government, work began on a multi-phase restoration project designed to return the theater to the way it was during its heyday, circa 1901.[3]

In mid-2007, the restoration project was still in Phase I, which includes the refurbishment of the theater's proscenium arch, auditorium ceiling and stairs. As of July 2007, more than $910,000 had been fund raised to complete the work. During exploratory work on the water-stained ceiling, elaborate designs including Roman figures, were discovered under four coats of paint.[2]

Work on the archway was completed during the summer of 2006, and the restored interior of the auditorium was revealed on September 8, 2007.[4]

Live performances

Intimately Yours

A music series that takes well-known artists such as Bruce Cockburn and Suzanne Vega and puts them in a smaller venue setting.

Writers on a New England Stage

An award-winning series that collaborates with New Hampshire Public Radio to create interviews with authors like Dan Brown and John Updike.

Kids RULE!

A series of shows primarily for kids.

Cinema

Mainstream, independent, and foreign films are shown in this summer showcase of films.

Telluride by the Sea

A film festival that has in the past hosted such films as Capote, Finding Neverland, and Bob Dylan: No Direction Home.

External links

References

  1. ""About The Music Hall"". The Music Hall. Retrieved May 19, 2009.
  2. 1 2 Chris Quartarone (February 2, 2007). ""Hidden Treasures"". Seacoast Online/Portsmouth Herald. Retrieved May 19, 2009.
  3. ""An 'American Treasure' Saved"". The Music Hall. Retrieved May 19, 2009.
  4. ""The Music Hall Restoration Project"". The Music Hall. Retrieved May 19, 2009.
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