Raleigh Memorial Auditorium at the Duke Energy Center for the Performing Arts

Duke Free energy Heart for the Performing Arts
Progress-Energy-Center-for-the-Performing-Arts-20080321.jpeg

Duke Free energy Middle for the Performing Arts in Raleigh and commemorative statue of the city'due south namesake Sir Walter Raleigh

Address 2 Eastward South Street
Raleigh, N Carolina
United states of america
Coordinates Coordinates: 35°46′17″N 78°38′22″W  /  35.771325°N 78.639483°W  / 35.771325; -78.639483
Type Performing arts center
Capacity Raleigh Memorial Auditorium: 2,277
Meymandi Concert Hall: 1,700
Fletcher Opera Theater: 600
Kennedy Theater: 150
Construction
Opened 1932
Reopened 2001
Website
www.dukeenergycenterraleigh.com

Duke Energy Center for the Performing Arts is the master venue for the performing arts in Raleigh, North Carolina.

The naming rights to the center currently are held by Duke Energy (formerly Progress Free energy), which purchased them from the city in 2005 for a 20-year term at the price of $7.5 one thousand thousand. The original naming rights previously were held by Concern Telecom, Inc. (now EarthLink)), and the facility was known as the BTI Middle for the Performing Arts from 1997-2005. BTI Owner Peter Loftin donated $3.ane 1000000 to the center in 1999, matching BTI's earlier donation.[i]

The center consists of:

  • Raleigh Memorial Auditorium (opened 1932, renovated 1990)
  • Meymandi Concert Hall (opened 2001)
  • A. J. Fletcher Opera Theater (opened 2001)
  • Kennedy Theater (opened 2001)
  • Lichtin Plaza (opened 2001)

Operation Venues and Facilities [edit]

Raleigh Memorial Auditorium [edit]

Raleigh Memorial Auditorium opened in 1932 to replace the city's original 1912 City Auditorium, which burned in 1930. The auditorium'southward name commemorates Raleigh citizens who died serving their land during World State of war I.

Situated downtown at the southern end of Fayetteville Street, the Greek Revival structure is an architectural complement to the North Carolina Land Capitol located a few blocks away at the northern terminus of the street. The removal of the obstructive original Raleigh Convention Center in 2005 (at present replaced with a building on an adjacent site) restored the historic vista forth Fayetteville Street between Memorial Auditorium and the Capitol.

Post-obit minor improvements in 1963 and 1977, the auditorium was renovated extensively in 1990, with the notable addition of an external modernistic glass concourse and lobby. The venue seats two,277 and most often hosts big musical theater productions.

Meymandi Concert Hall [edit]

Meymandi Concert Hall seats i,700 in a shoebox configuration. Information technology is the dwelling house of the North Carolina Symphony, which previously held its concerts in Memorial Auditorium. Named for the mother of Raleigh physician and philanthropist Dr. Assad Meymandi, the facility has excellent acoustics.[2] The North Carolina Debutante Ball is held annually at the Meymandi Concert Hall.[3]

Fletcher Opera Theater [edit]

Fletcher Opera Theater seats 600, providing a more than intimate space for sleeping accommodation music, solo and operatic performances, also as other ensemble productions. The theater is named in honor of Alfred Johnston Fletcher (1887-1979), a pioneer of television broadcasting in Raleigh, whose family foundation provided fractional funding for its structure. In 2010, Carolina Ballet became the theater'due south resident performing arts arrangement, performing over 40 times per flavour in the theater.

Kennedy Theater [edit]

Raleigh Memorial Auditorium, 2013

Raleigh Memorial Auditorium and Lichtin Plaza, Christmas 2018

Seating 150, the Kennedy Theater offers a 40x60-foot black-box space for nontraditional performances and experimental theater. Information technology is named for longtime Raleigh theater patron K.D. Kennedy Jr. and his married woman Sara Lynn.

Lichtin Plaza [edit]

Lichtin Plaza is the ii-acre (8,100 kii) lawn fronting the Duke Free energy Centre. It often serves as a venue for outdoor festivals, as well as the site of public and private gatherings and tented events. The plaza is named for Harold Lichtin, a prominent regional commercial real estate developer.

Performance Groups and Organizations [edit]

Organizations that regularly concur performances and concerts at the Duke Energy Centre include:

  • Theatre In The Park
  • Broadway Series South
  • N Carolina Opera
  • Carolina Ballet
  • North Carolina Theatre
  • Pinecone, The Piedmont Council of Traditional Music
  • North Carolina Symphony
  • Triangle Youth Orchestra, Triangle Youth Symphony, & Triangle Youth Philharmonic
  • Raleigh Trip the light fantastic Theater
  • Raleigh Little Theatre
  • Burning Coal Theatre Company
  • Hot Summer Nights at the Kennedy
  • A.J. Fletcher Opera Establish
  • Triangle Brass Band
  • Triangle Youth Brass Band
  • Shaw University
  • The Raleigh Ringers
  • TheaterWorksUSA -- The Pout Pout Fish

References [edit]

  1. ^ Many Cheers for Loftin's Giving TBJ Aug. ii, 1999.
  2. ^ "Assad Meymandi: Polymath, humanist, philanthropist". www.waltermagazine.com . Retrieved 2020-02-12 .
  3. ^ Staff, North State Journal (2019-07-21). "2019 Due north Carolina Debutantes appear". The North Land Journal . Retrieved 2021-12-thirteen .

External links [edit]

  • Media related to Knuckles Free energy Center for the Performing Arts at Wikimedia Commons
  • Website of the Duke Free energy Centre for the Performing Arts

colemananded1945.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duke_Energy_Center_for_the_Performing_Arts

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