July 10, 2009

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Reference: At this theatre

August Wilson Theatre (Broadway)

Built in 1925 by the prestigious Theatre Guild as the Guild Theatre to house its famed acting company (the Lunts, Edward G. Robinson, Claude Rains, etc.), this house has since been named the ANTA and renamed the Virginia in 1981 in honor of Virginia M. Binger, owner of Jujamcyn Theaters along with her husband James.

On October 16, 2005, the theatre was renamed the August Wilson Theatre, marking the first time in history that a Broadway theatre has been named for an African American. The late playwright has been so honored for his incomparable contribution to the American theatre.

Recent productions here include Little Women; Little Shop of Horrors; Flower Drum Song; The Crucible; Smokey Joe’s CafeThe Songs of Leiber and Stoller; The Wild Party, The Best Man and King Hedley II.

Prior to a successful revival of My Fair Lady starring Richard Chamberlain, this theatre housed Gregory Hines in the hit musical Jelly’s Last Jam; the musical Carrie; the Tony-winning musical City of Angels; Ian McKellen in Wild Honey; a revival of Shenandoah; the British farce Run for Your Wife; a Canadian production of The Mikado; Execution of Justice; the hit revival of Rodgers and Hart’s On Your Toes; Oh, Brother!; Copperfield; and Derek Jacobi in The Suicide.

Productions in the 1970's included a memorable revival of Mary Chase's "Harvey," starring Helen Hayes, James Stewart and Jesse White; appearances by the dance companies of Alvin Ailey, Louis Falco, Pearl Lang, Paul Taylor, Nikolais and the Dance Theatre of Harlem; the musical "Purlie" from the Broadway Theatre; Julie Harris winning a Tony Award for "The Last of Mrs. Lincoln;" Elizabeth Ashley, Keir Dullea, Fred Gwynne and Kate Reid in a revival of Tennessee, Williams's "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof;" the exuberant black musical "Bubbling Brown Sugar,"which ran for 766 performances; Charles Repole in a revival of the 1920's musical "Whoopee!;" and Maggie Smith in Tom Stoppard's "Night and Day."

Highlights of the 1960's included Hugh Wheeler's fascinating "Big Fish, Little Fish" with Jason Robards, Jr., Hume Cronyn, Martin Gabel, Elizabeth Wilson, George Grizzard, directed by Sir John Gielgud; Robert Bolt's distinguished historical play "A Man for All Seasons," which won six Tony Awards, including Best Play, Best Actor (Paul Scofield) and Best Director (Noel Willman); James Baldwin's "Blues for Mr. Charlie," directed by Burgess Meredith; Diana Sands and Alan Alda in the hit two-character comedy "The Owl and the Pussycat;" Peter Shaffer's "The Royal Hunt of the Sun;" "The Thurber Carnival," a revue of Thurber sketches with Tom Ewell, Peggy Cass, Paul Ford, Alice Ghostley and others; and a loving revival of "Our Town" with Henry Fonda, Ed Begley, Elizabeth Hartman, Harvey Evans, Mildred Natwick, John Beal and Margaret Hamilton.

In 1950 this theatre was extensively renovated and became the ANTA, named for the American National Theatre and Academy. The 1950's saw productions of "Twentieth Century" with Gloria Swanson and Jose Ferrer; Judith Anderson in "The Tower Beyond Tragedy;" an all-star revival of "The Skin of Our Teeth" with Mary Martin, Helen Hayes, George Abbott, Florence Reed, Don Murray; "Say Darling," a satire with music, starring Robert Morse; and Archibald MacLeish's Pulitzer Prize play "J.B.," starring Raymond Massey and Christopher Plummer.

Theatre Information:
245 West 52nd Street
New York, NY 10019
US

Box Office: Tele-charge: (212) 239-6200
Outside NY: (800) 432-7250

Public Transportation:
SUBWAY: Take the N,R,W to 49th Street or the 1,9 to 50th Street, walk North to 52nd Street and West to the theatre; Take the C,E to 50th Street, walk North to 52nd Street and East to the theatre.

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