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Ordway Center for the Performing Arts

Ordway Center for the Performing Arts
Ordway Music Theater (1985-2000)
The Ordway Center.jpg
Address 345 Washington Street
St. Paul, Minnesota
United States
Coordinates 44°56′41″N 93°05′54″W / 44.9448°N 93.0982°W / 44.9448; -93.0982Coordinates: 44°56′41″N 93°05′54″W / 44.9448°N 93.0982°W / 44.9448; -93.0982
Capacity Music Theater: 1,900
Concert Hall: 1,093
Construction
Opened January 1, 1985
Architect Benjamin C. Thompson
Website
www.ordway.org

The Ordway Center for the Performing Arts is located in downtown Saint Paul, Minnesota and hosts a variety of performing arts, such as touring Broadway musicals, orchestra, opera, and cultural performers. It serves as a home to several local arts organizations, including the Minnesota Opera, The Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra, and The Schubert Club. James Rocco is currently the center's Vice President and Producing Artistic Director.

In 1980, Saint Paul resident Sally Ordway Irvine (3M heiress and arts patron) dreamed of a European-style concert hall offering “everything from opera to the Russian circus.” Sally contributed $7.5 million—a sum matched by other members of the Ordway family—toward the cost of the facility. Fifteen Twin Cities corporations and foundations were the principal funders of the $46 million complex, then the most expensive privately funded arts facility ever built in the state. The internationally known architect (and Saint Paul native) Benjamin Thompson, whose other projects included the Faneuil Hall renovation in Boston and South Street Seaport in New York, was selected to design a building that would project “a visible contemporary image” but would also fit harmoniously on a site facing Rice Park, a block-square park framed by historic buildings. As designed by Thompson, Ordway Center (originally named Ordway Music Theatre) previously contains a Music Theater (1,900 seats). When originally built it included an intimate McKnight Theatre (306 seats); two large rehearsal rooms; and the Marzitelli Foyer, a spacious two-story lobby with a glass curtain-wall through which theater-goers enjoy a sweeping panorama of Rice Park, its surrounding buildings, and in the distance, the Mississippi River. The McKnight Theatre was demolished in 2013 to make room for the new 1,093 seat Concert Hall which opened on February 28th, 2015.


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