Theatre Atlanta Center Stage Earthlink Live CW Midtown Music Complex Center Stage Atlanta |
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Address | 1374 West Peachtree St. NW Atlanta, GA United States |
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Coordinates | 33°47′32″N 84°23′17″W / 33.79222°N 84.38806°WCoordinates: 33°47′32″N 84°23′17″W / 33.79222°N 84.38806°W |
Parking | Triple-tier parking garage |
Type | Indoor Concert/Performance Venue |
Capacity | 1050 (Center Stage), 650 (The Loft), 350 (Vinyl) |
Years active | 1966-Present |
Website | |
http://www.centerstage-atlanta.com |
Center Stage Atlanta is a mid-sized concert complex comprising three separate venues and located at 1374 West Peachtree Street NW in the heart of Midtown Atlanta, Georgia.
Originally known as Theatre Atlanta, the concert hall was built in memorial to a young theater enthusiast. Upon its opening in the fall of 1966, the building functioned as a performing arts theater, but has since become primarily music-focused.
Center Stage Atlanta is made up of three venues differing in size and character: Vinyl, The Loft, and Center Stage Theater.
The building, dating from 1966, has played host to a variety of uses within the performing arts spectrum and has held a handful of different titles.
The building of Theatre Atlanta was largely paid for by a single benefactor, Frania Lee, heiress to the Hunt Oil fortune. The company of Theatre Atlanta originated in 1957 as a professional repertory company and Lee's daughter, Helen Lee Cartledge, was the first president of the Theatre Atlanta's Women's Guild. Lee built a home for the company as a tribute to Cartledge, who perished in the infamous Orly plane crash on June 3, 1962, along with her husband and 128 others (which made it the worst airplane disaster to date). The Atlanta Arts Association had sponsored a month-long tour of Europe and many of Atlanta's cultural and civic leaders lost their lives on the flight home from Paris.
Theatre Atlanta opened its doors on October 26, 1966 with its first production in the new building, The Royal Hunt of the Sun. The venue originally seated 77 around a 130-foot wing to wing, 68-foot thrust stage. The building housed the triple-tier parking garage still operating today, as well as a gourmet restaurant, cocktail lounges, a space for costume designing and, among other things, a few classrooms for Theatre Atlanta Institute of Speech and Voice.
In the early 1980s, Theatre Atlanta was phased out and the building took on the name Center Stage. Though it continued to concentrate largely on theatre, the business housed a few colorful deviations.
On July 4, 1982, The Video Music Channel made its first cable broadcast from the basement of Center Stage. Despite its low budget, the station showcased original programming and quickly developed a following. In 1984, the VMC seized an opportunity to step up by switching to broadcast on channel 69. Although they acquired a larger audience and fancier studio, ratings weren't high enough to keep it afloat and the VMC ended in 1985.
In the early days of Ted Turner and cable TV, World Championship Wrestling was a weekly Saturday night TV show produced by World Championship Wrestling, Inc. based in Atlanta, GA. The show was originally taped at WTBS' studios on Techwood Drive until 1989, when the location was moved to Center Stage. On April 4, 1992, the show was renamed WCW Saturday Night and relocated to the CNN Center (although months later, they would return to film in Center Stage or in Columbus, GA).