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Shubert Theatre (Minneapolis)

Cowles Center for Dance and the Performing Arts
Sam S. Shubert Theatre
Shubert Theatre Minneapolis.jpg
The Goodale Theater of the Cowles Center for Dance and the Performing Arts
Cowles Center for Dance and the Performing Arts is located in Minnesota
Cowles Center for Dance and the Performing Arts
Cowles Center for Dance and the Performing Arts is located in the US
Cowles Center for Dance and the Performing Arts
Location 528 Hennepin Avenue
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Coordinates 44°58′47″N 93°16′23″W / 44.97972°N 93.27306°W / 44.97972; -93.27306Coordinates: 44°58′47″N 93°16′23″W / 44.97972°N 93.27306°W / 44.97972; -93.27306
Built 1910
Architect Swasey, William Albert; Robinson, J.L. Co., et al.
Architectural style Beaux Arts
NRHP Reference # 95001230
Added to NRHP October 31, 1995

The Cowles Center for Dance and the Performing Arts (formerly the Minnesota Shubert Performing Arts and Education Center) is a performing arts center and flagship for dance in downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States. The Cowles Center was developed as an incubation project by Artspace Projects, Inc and includes the refurbished 500-seat Goodale Theater (formerly the Sam S. Shubert Theater); the Hennepin Center for the Arts, home to 20 leading dance and performing arts organizations; a state-of-the-art education studio housing a distance learning program; and an atrium connecting the buildings. The Cowles Center is a catalyst for the creation, presentation and education of dance in the Twin Cities.

Both the Goodale Theater and the Hennepin Center for the Arts (formerly the Minneapolis Masonic Temple) are on the National Register of Historic Places.

The distance learning program began teaching students in 2002. Using IP videoconferencing technologies, it brings artists into classrooms throughout Minnesota, nationally and internationally, creating two-way interactive, real-time teaching environments.

The Shubert Theatrical Company, run by brothers Levi, Samuel, and Jacob, entered the New York theater scene in 1900 and had become the largest theater owning and producing organization in America by 1920.

When Samuel Shubert died in a train wreck in 1905, his brothers memorialized him by naming a few of their new theaters after him. Two of these new theaters opened on the same day in 1910: Saint Paul’s Shubert Theater, which became the Fitzgerald Theater in 1994, and The Samuel S. Shubert Theater in Minneapolis, which reopened as The Cowles Center for Dance and the Performing Arts in September 2011, after a long and dramatic history.

The Samuel S. Shubert Theater was designed by William Albert Swasey (1864–1940). For its time it was a mid-sized house, consisting of 1,500 seats with two shallow balconies. The front of the building had a Classical Revival façade featuring four pairs of bas-relief columns framing three arched windows at the second-story level. As with many of Swasey’s other buildings, the decorative elements of the façade were made of glazed terra cotta.

The opening show at Minneapolis’ new Samuel S. Shubert Theatre was The White Sister starring Viola Allen. Ticket prices ranged from $2.50 to 50 cents.


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