Miller Theater (Philadelphia)
Miller Theater , originally the Sam S. Shubert Theatre and later, the Merriam Theater , is Philadelphia 's most continuous location for touring Broadway shows . It is located at 250 South Broad Street within the Avenue of the Arts cultural district of Center City Philadelphia . The Theatre was built by The Shubert Organization in 1918.
In 1972, the theater came under the ownership of the Academy of Music , and was owned by the University of the Arts . In November 2016, it was purchased by the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts , now The Philadelphia Orchestra and Ensemble Arts, and later renamed the Miller Theater.
History
Lee and J. J. Shubert , theatrical producers, set out to build a theater memorializing their brother, Sam, who had died several years earlier in a railroad accident.[ 3] Two theaters were built, one in Philadelphia and one in New York City . The Shubert Theatre in Philadelphia was built in 1918 on the site of the demolished Horticultural Hall that included the reuse of the hall's marble staircase in the theater's interior design. The building stands seven stories high with theater on the first level and six floors used for offices and classrooms. Herbert J. Krapp is the original architect.[ 4] Additions and renovations were made in 1958.
In 1986, the stage and sound were modernized, and in 1991, the theatre was renamed and dedicated to John W. Merriam, a local entrepreneur, who was active for many years on the board of directors of the University of the Arts.[ 5] [ 6]
In March 2022, the theater was renamed Miller Theater in honor of Alan B. Miller, a founding board member of the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts , who donated an undisclosed amount of money toward restorations and upgrades.[ 7]
Productions
The theater opened in 1918 with a road production of a musical from London and New York called Chu Chin Chow , featuring Florence Reed . [ 8] In the early years, George Gershwin musicals and Al Jolson reviews graced the Shubert stage. John Barrymore played Hamlet in the 1920s[ 9] and burlesque was featured in the 1930s. Other performers included: Helen Hayes , Katharine Hepburn , Sammy Davis Jr. , Angela Lansbury , and Laurence Olivier . Through the decades, a number of highly acclaimed Broadway, off-Broadway and one-night performances have been performed at the theater.
Pre- and Post-Broadway engagements at the Shubert :
1922: Hitchy-Koo of 1922
1927: Strike Up the Band , Funny Face , The Circus Princess
1928: Treasure Girl
1930: Girl Crazy
1931: Everybody's Welcome
1932: Face the Music
1944: Glad To See You
1944: Sadie Thompson [ 10]
1945: Are You With It?
1946: Shootin' Star , Annie Get Your Gun , Around the World , Street Scene
1947: Music in My Heart , Bonanza Bound
1948: Kiss Me, Kate , Inside U.S.A. , Sleepy Hollow , That's The Ticket , Brigadoon
1950: The Consul , Guys and Dolls , Out of This World
1951: Make a Wish , Paint Your Wagon
1952: Shuffle Along , Of Thee I Sing
1953: Hazel Flagg , Kismet
1954: Fanny , Silk Stockings , Plain and Fancy
1955: The Amazing Adele
1956: Mr. Wonderful , Strip For Action , The Most Happy Fella , Ziegfeld Follies of 1956 , Happy Hunting , Bells Are Ringing
1957: Jamaica , Rumple , The Music Man
1958: Oh Captain! , Whoop-Up
1959: Redhead , Destry Rides Again , Gypsy , Take Me Along , Saratoga
1960: Greenwillow , The Unsinkable Molly Brown , Do Re Mi
1961: 13 Daughters , The Happiest Girl in the World , Donnybrook! , How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying , Kean , Subways Are for Sleeping
1962: I Can Get It for You Wholesale , We Take the Town , La Belle , Stop the World – I Want to Get Off , Nowhere to Go But Up
1963: Hot Spot , Here's Love , 110 in the Shade , The Girl Who Came to Supper
1964: High Spirits , Golden Boy , Ben Franklin in Paris , Something More! , Bajour , Kelly
1965: Royal Flush , Drat! The Cat! , The Yearling , Sweet Charity
1966: It's a Bird...It's a Plane...It's Superman , Mame , Walking Happy
1967: Illya Darling , Sherry! , Henry, Sweet Henry , How Now, Dow Jones
1968: Here's Where I Belong , George M! , Her First Roman , The Fig Leaves Are Falling
1970: Lovely Ladies, Kind Gentlemen , Ari
1971: Lolita, My Love
1972: The Selling of the President , Irene
1974: Over Here! , Miss Moffat
1976: My Fair Lady , So Long, 174th Street
1979: I Remember Mama
[ 11]
References
Notes
^ "Philadelphia's Kimmel Center Purchasing Merriam Theatre - Playbill" . Playbill .
^ "Merriam Theater - Philadelphia, PA - Live Stage Theaters on Waymarking.com" . www.waymarking.com .
^ The Pittsburgh Press . The Pittsburgh Press.
^ "-- citation: Philadelphia College of Performing Arts -- Philadelphia Architects and Buildings" . www.philadelphiabuildings.org .
^ The Philadelphia Inquirer, Wednesday December 11, 1991, p. 69
^ "Archives - Philly.com" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Archived from the original on October 20, 2013.
^ "The Merriam Theater is dead. Long live the Miller Theater" .
^ Glazer, Irvin R. (1986). Philadelphia Theatres, A-Z: A Comprehensive, Descriptive Record of 813 Theatres Constructed Since 1724 . Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-24054-6 .
^ Morrison, Michael A. (1997-09-28). John Barrymore, Shakespearean Actor . Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-62028-4 .
^ Waters (November 1, 1944). "Legitimate: Plays Out Of Town - Sadie Thompson". Variety . Vol. 156, no. 8. p. 44.
^ "Shubert Theatre (Philadelphia, PA) | Ovrtur" . ovrtur.com . Retrieved 2022-06-22 .
External links
Philadelphia area theaters
Buildings
Companies