Lincoln Center For The Performing Arts

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A view of the Metropolitan Opera House at Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts.

Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts is an extensive 16.3 acres (66,000 m²) arts complex in New York City which contains the city's finest performing arts venues, and serves as a home for New York's oldest and best established performing companies. At the head of the complex's central courtyard is the Metropolitan Opera House, flanked on the left by the New York State Theater, and on the right by Avery Fisher Hall. In addition to an impressive roster of resident performing companies, the center is also home to a specialized performing arts library, and top class dance and music training facilities.

Created with a vision of bringing together the best of New York's resident performing companies into one major performing arts center, Lincoln Center was conceived and designed beginning in the 1950s. Ground was broken for the center in 1959, by President Dwight D. Eisenhower. The first theater, Philharmonic Hall (Avery Fisher Hall), is the main venue of the New York Philharmonic, opening in 1962. It was followed by the New York State Theater, resident theater to the New York City Opera and the New York City Ballet, in 1964. The Metropolitan Opera House, home to the Metropolitan Opera and site of the American Ballet Theater's annual Lincoln Center season, opened in 1966.

In addition to the three main theaters, the center contains a number of other significant venues and arts institutions, and provides a standard by which performing arts is measured throughout the United States. The scope and quality of Lincoln Center's facilities, programs, and artistic companies is unequaled in any performing arts complex in the world. The performance arts can exert valuable, positive influences on people, contributing to their quality of life and well being. The center provides an environment that allows the arts to flourish and allows many people to experience quality performances. Lincoln Center makes a substantial contribution to the overall health of New York's residents and visitors.

Overview

A sign directing visitors to the various buildings at Lincoln Center.

Lincoln Center, an extensive complex of performing, rehearsal, and educational facilities is located in Manhattan's upper west side. The center contains a total of 22 performance facilities, which present thousands of performances every year, performed by resident companies, invited guest artists, and talented students from the center's educational institutions.

The center is operated by a consortium of twelve major arts organizations, each with its own administration and board of directors, listed here in alphabetical order: Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, Film Society of Lincoln Center, Jazz at Lincoln Center, Juilliard School, Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, Inc., Lincoln Center Theater, Metropolitan Opera, New York City Ballet, New York City Opera, New York Philharmonic, New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, and School of American Ballet.

Beginning with initial plans in the 1950s, with the first facilities completing construction in the early 1960s, Lincoln Center has continuously expanded and developed both its facilities and programs, bringing together arts and cultures from all across the globe, to present alongside the center's resident companies, totaling thousands of performances a year, created by thousands of artists.

The center also contributes to the economic stability of the upper west side, with the center's resident companies, schools and organization providing jobs both in the arts and in a wide range of support fields, and drawing five million visitors a year to the neighborhood.

History

A team of civic leaders and others led by, and under the initiative of John D. Rockefeller III, built Lincoln Center as part of the "Lincoln Square Renewal Project" during Robert Moses' program of urban renewal in the 1960s. Rockefeller was its inaugural president from 1956 and became its chairman in 1961. He is credited with raising more than half of the $184.5 million in private funds needed to build the complex, including drawing on his own funds; the Rockefeller Brothers Fund also contributed to the project. The Lincoln Center was the largest and most ambitious arts project in the history of New York City, and indeed in the United States.

Avery Fisher Hall (right) and the Metropolitan Opera House at twilight

The center's plans included a new home for the Metropolitan Opera, the New York State Theater, to be shared by the New York City Opera and the New York City Ballet, the Avery Fisher Hall, which became the home of the New York Philharmonic, the Alice Tully Hall, and two theaters of drama. In order to create a resident nonprofit theater company to compliment the opera, ballet and orchestra, Repertory Theater of Lincoln Center was founded in 1960. With the facilities still in the final planning stages and under construction, a training program for a core of performers was initiated in 1962.[1] The company's first production was Arthur Miller's After the Fall. The first two seasons presented repertory split between new American plays and American and European classics, but was met with cool critical reception, and the idea was abandoned for the time being. Reestablished in 1985, the theater company has flourished and now goes simply by the name of the Lincoln Center Theater, offering a combination of musicals and dramas.[1] The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center was formed in 1965, and took residence in Alice Tully Hall.

Throughout the 1960s, the major facilities of Lincoln center were completed, with the initial complex reaching completion with the opening of the Juilliard School in 1969. Fundraising campaigns for upkeep, expansion and renewal began immediately, and facilities have been added renovated continuously throughout the center's history.

Lincoln Center cultural institutions also make use of facilities located away from the main campus. In 2004, Lincoln Center was expanded through the addition of Jazz at Lincoln Center's newly built facilities (Frederick P. Rose Hall) at the new Time Warner Center, located a few blocks to the south. In March 2006 Lincoln Center launched construction on a major redevelopment plan to modernize and renovate various parts of the Lincoln Center campus facilities in preparation for the center's 50th anniversary celebration in 2009. These include the 65th Street Project—part of a major redevelopment plan—to create a new pedestrian promenade designed to improve accessibility and the aesthetics of that area of the campus.[2]

Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, Inc

Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, Inc. is one of the 12 resident organization listed above, and serves three primary roles: Presenter of artistic programming, national leader in arts and education and community relations, and manager of the Lincoln Center campus. As a presenter of more than 400 events annually, its programs include American Songbook, Great Performers, Lincoln Center Festival, Lincoln Center Out of Doors, Midsummer Night Swing, the Mostly Mozart Festival, and the Emmy Award-winning Live From Lincoln Center. In July 2006, LCPA began work, in partnership with publishing company John Wiley & Sons, Inc. to publish at least 15 books, focusing on performing arts, and drawing on Lincoln Center Institute’s educational background and archives.

Performance facilities

Auditorium of the Metropolitan Opera house
The lobby of the New York State Theater
  • The Allen Room—508 seat amphitheater with 50-foot glass wall overlooking Central Park; part of Jazz at Lincoln Center's facilities
  • Dizzy's Club Coca-Cola—nightclub-style venue in the Jazz at Lincoln Center facility; allows jazz to be performed in its traditional venue
  • Rose Theater—1,094-seat concert hall designed for jazz performances.
  • Irene Diamond Education Center—rehearsal, recording, and classroom facility at Jazz at Lincoln Center

Other associated and local theaters and facilities

Night view of the Vivian Beaumont Theater, home of the Lincoln Center Theater company

Resident organizations

The entrance to Jazz at Lincoln Center

Lincoln Center houses several cultural companies and institutions, including:

Staircase in the Metropolitan Opera House

Each organization has its own board of directors and administration. Together, they present thousands of performances, educational programs, tours, and other events every year.[3]

Architects

Architects who designed buildings at Lincoln Center include:

Historical events

Nancy Rubins' Big Pleasure Point, display at Lincoln Center in 2006

In popular culture

In popular culture, in the 1990s PBS game show Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego? Robocrook steals Lincoln Center. The Center also appears in the movies The Producers (1968 film), August Rush, Moonstruck, and Ghostbusters.

The center has been seen many times on the Young People's Concerts, and is regularly featured on PBS's Live from Lincoln Center.

Legacy

The Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts remains one of the world's leading presenters of performing arts. Its performances range from authentic kabuki theater and dance premieres from world-renowned choreographers, to outdoor dancing to live music, to opera performed with life-size puppets and free performances of Korean drumming and African dance. In the 2007 season alone, there were roughly 5000 performances by over 3000 artists, from every corner of the globe.[3]

The Lincoln Center has won Emmy Awards for its Live From Lincoln Center telecasts. It remains a leader in arts and education, as well as community relations, and takes a maintains a wide range of activities beyond its concert halls and through its education arm. The Lincoln Center Institute offers arts-related symposiums, family programming, and other community initiatives. It also is responsible for providing curricula to educational institutions in in Australia, China, Mexico, and South Africa. The Lincoln Center strives to make art from around the world accessible to everyone.[3]

Gallery


See also


Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Answers.com, Lincoln Center. Retrieved September 15, 2008.
  2. Robin Pogrebin, Glimpsing The Future On 65th St, New York Times, August 17, 2006. Retrieved September 15, 2008.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Lincoln Center, About Lincoln Center. Retrieved September 15, 2008.

References
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External links

All links retrieved October 29, 2022.

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