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Howard Gilman Opera House

Brooklyn Academy of Music
BAM
2013 BAM Peter Jay Sharp Building from west.jpg
BAM Peter Jay Sharp Building (2013)
Address 30 Lafayette Avenue (Peter Jay Sharp)
651 Fulton Street (Harvey)
321 Ashland Place (Fisher)
Location Brooklyn, New York
Type Performing arts center
Capacity Howard Gilman Opera House: 2,109
Lepercq Space: 350
Harvey Theater: 874
Fishman Space: 250
Construction
Built 1908
Opened 1908
Website

www.bam.org

Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM)
Brooklyn Academy of Music is located in New York City
Brooklyn Academy of Music
Brooklyn Academy of Music is located in New York
Brooklyn Academy of Music
Brooklyn Academy of Music is located in the US
Brooklyn Academy of Music
Location 30 Lafayette Avenue
Brooklyn, New York City
Coordinates Coordinates: 40°41′11″N 73°58′41″W / 40.68639°N 73.97806°W / 40.68639; -73.97806
Architect Herts & Tallant
Architectural style Renaissance Revival
NRHP reference # 06000251
Added to NRHP May 2, 2006

www.bam.org

The Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) is a performing arts venue in Brooklyn, New York City, known as a center for progressive and avant garde performance. It presented its first performance in 1861 and began operations in its present location in 1908.

Today, BAM has a reputation as a leader in presenting "cutting edge" performance and has grown into an urban arts center which focuses on both international arts presentation and local community needs. Its purpose is to provide an environment in which its audiences – annually, more than 775,000 people – can experience a broad array of aesthetic and cultural programs. From 1999 to 2014, BAM was headed by Karen Brooks Hopkins, President, and Joseph V. Melillo, Executive Producer. Katy Clark is now president, succeeding Hopkins who retired in spring 2015.

Founded in 1861, the first BAM facility at 176–194 Montague Street in Brooklyn Heights was conceived as the home of the Philharmonic Society of Brooklyn. The building, designed by architect Leopold Eidlitz, housed a large theater seating 2,200, a smaller concert hall, dressing and chorus rooms, and a vast "baronial" kitchen. BAM presented amateur and professional music and theater productions, including performers such as Ellen Terry, Edwin Booth, and Fritz Kreisler.

After the building burned to the ground on November 30, 1903, plans were made to relocate to a new facility in the then fashionable neighborhood of Fort Greene. The cornerstone was laid at 30 Lafayette Avenue in 1906 and a series of opening events were held in the fall of 1908 culminating with a grand gala evening featuring Geraldine Farrar and Enrico Caruso in a Metropolitan Opera production of Charles Gounod's Faust. The Met would continue to present seasons in Brooklyn, featuring star singers such as Caruso, right through until 1921.


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