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Théâtre Montparnasse

Coordinates: 48°50′27″N 2°19′28″E / 48.8409275°N 2.324502°E / 48.8409275; 2.324502
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Théâtre Montparnasse
Théâtre Montparnasse-Gaston Baty
Map
Address31, rue de la Gaîté,
14th. Paris
Paris
Coordinates48°50′27″N 2°19′28″E / 48.8409275°N 2.324502°E / 48.8409275; 2.324502
Capacitymain theatre: 715
Petit Montparnasse: 200
Construction
Opened1886
ArchitectCharles Peigniet
Website
www.theatremontparnasse.com/

The Théâtre Montparnasse (French pronunciation: [teatʁ mɔ̃paʁnas]) is a theatre at 31, rue de la Gaîté in the 14th arrondissement of Paris.

History

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After the death of famed Paris theatre builder and artistic director Henri Larochelle (1826-1884), his widow, along with former actor and artistic director Louis-Hubert Hartmann, built the present structure, which opened on 29 October 1886, on a site that had been dedicated to theatre since 1817.[1] Architect Charles Peigniet, who helped create the pedestal for the Statue of Liberty in New York Bay, designed the new building.

Although the Théâtre Montparnasse began as a commercial playhouse for melodramatic fare, it occasionally leased its stage to new experimentalist plays of the Independent Theatre movement. A year after the theatre's opening, Hartmann readily agreed to lease his stage to André Antoine, whose revolutionary new company, the Théâtre Libre, had, in spring 1887, earned immediate publicity as an exciting venture devoted to producing new plays. He also generously offered his warehouse of scenery and backdrops.[2] Théâtre Montparnasse became the Théâtre Libre's home for the six programmed evenings between November 1887 and June 1888, where it presented fifteen new works of varying quality. The season's most resounding success was the French premiere of Tolstoy's The Power of Darkness on 10 February 1888, which led to a rare sold-out repeat performance eight days later.[3] By contrast, on 16 January 1891, Paul Fort's Théâtre d'Art presented a failed, five-and-a-half-hour production of Shelley's The Cenci in French translation.[4]

From 1930 to 1943, Gaston Baty directed the theatre, and as a result, it became known as the Théâtre Montparnasse-Gaston Baty. From 1944 to 1964, actress Margaret Jamois directed the theatre.[5]

In 1965, Lars Schmidt bought the theatre and appointed Jerome Hullot artistic director. Schmidt and Hullot introduced many English talents to the French stage, including such authors and actors as Harold Pinter, Peter Shaffer, Noël Coward, Arnold Wesker, and Murray Schisgal. In 1979, they created the Petit Montparnasse theatre on the site of a former warehouse.

In 1984, Schmidt retired, and Myriam Colombi succeeded him, renovating the theatre and adding a bar-restaurant. The current capacity of the main theatre is seven hundred and fifteen seats.

In 1998, renovation and expansion of the Petit Montparnasse began, and it became a hall with two hundred seats, finally reopening in November 2003.

The Théâtre Montparnasse-Gaston Baty was designated a historic monument on 3 April 1984.

Productions since 1930

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Productions by Gaston Baty

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Productions by Marguerite Jamois

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References

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  1. ^ Baur, Peter. Les Théâtres de Paris. Lukianos, 1970.
  2. ^ Antoine, André. Memories of the Théâtre Libre. 1921. Translated by Marvin A. Carlson, U of Miami P, 1964, p. 46.
  3. ^ Antoine 61-63.
  4. ^ Deak, Frantisek. Symbolist Theater: The Formation of an Avant-Garde. Johns Hopkins UP, 1993, pp.140-41.
  5. ^ Baur.
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