Latest news with #DelacorteTheater


New York Times
14 hours ago
- Entertainment
- New York Times
To Understand the Delacorte Theater Renovation, Peek Inside This Rowhouse
When the architect Stephen Chu bought a rowhouse in Ridgewood, Queens, more than 20 years ago, the neighborhood was far enough off the radar and cheap enough to be an architectural playground for a young designer. The two-family brick house, with faint outlines of the old-fashioned decorative shutters long removed, was across from a warehouse on a quiet street. Mr. Chu bought it with his partner at the time for $380,000. 'We broke up and I kept the house,' he said. Mr. Chu, 54, now has a portfolio filled with landmark designs, including the newly renovated Delacorte Theater in Central Park, which is set to reopen on Aug. 7 with a production of Shakespeare's 'Twelfth Night.' He said his home was 'never intended to be my architectural showpiece.' Still, his decades of home renovations in Ridgewood reflect a thoughtful approach to preservation. The Delacorte was built in 1962 as a 'pop-up,' in Mr. Chu's words, and he and his team at Ennead Architects, where he is a partner, took pains to spare hawthorn roots when trenching the site. 'Central Park is a scenic landmark, so the trees are protected,' he said. Cracked structural footings, some without rebar, received new jackets of reinforced concrete. A soaring torqued canopy now cantilevers over the entry gates and box office. The redwood ribbed siding that now hides the grandstand is a variegated patchwork of locally sourced water tower staves salvaged from old tanks. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


New York Times
2 days ago
- Entertainment
- New York Times
Free Shakespeare's Central Park Home Gets an $85 Million Glow Up
After an 18-month, $85 million overhaul, the Delacorte Theater reopens next month with a starry new version of 'Twelfth Night.' I'll leave it to playgoers and critics to deliver their verdicts on the production. I'm happy to report, in the meantime, that the renovation deftly fixes much of what ailed the city's beloved home of free Shakespeare in Central Park. It was on its last legs before it was shuttered. Built during the Kennedy era for the current price of a two-bedroom condo in Fort Lee, N.J., the Delacorte from Day One was a glorified, rickety high-school grandstand, with water leaking into ramshackle dressing rooms and raccoons nesting backstage. Watching great actors and directors put on 'Hamlet' there was roughly akin to consuming truffled langoustine on the L train. The modesty was part of its charm. Like the park, it spoke to the city's egalitarian soul and cultural ambition. Its makeover is the latest change to a park that has recently undergone, or is considering, a variety of alterations, which include the opening of the excellent Davis Center in Harlem, plans to revamp Wollman Rink and a proposal by the Metropolitan Museum to replace an old wing with a new one, a stone's throw from the Delacorte. It may seem odd to think of Central Park as a work in progress. It can come across as a grand relic from another century. But this middle stretch of the park in particular, which includes the Delacorte, has undergone a surprising number of upheavals over the past 200-odd years that mirror changes across the city. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.


Time Out
4 days ago
- Entertainment
- Time Out
Can't snag Shakespeare in the Park tix this summer? PBS will air Twelfth Night starring Lupita Nyong'o, Peter Dinklage
Shakespeare in the Park is one of the most storied cultural events in New York City, but good luck snagging tickets. Even if you live in one of the buildings along Central Park (in which case, don't hog the free tickets from the rest of us, OK?), the process of getting seats is a long and physically arduous one, entailing a box office line that forms at dawn the day of performance. (There is, thankfully, the digital lottery now as well, but you know what lotteries can be like.) This year is a particularly buzzy one, as the Delacorte Theater reopens with Twelfth Night after a two-year renovation. And to make it even more special, PBS announced that it will air the production this fall as part of its Great Performances series, giving not just disappointed New Yorkers but the entire country the chance to see Lupita Nyong'o, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Peter Dinklage, and Sandra Oh star in William Shakespeare's cross-dressing comedy classic. Twelfth Night will premiere on PBS at 9pm ET on Friday, November 14. Trimmed down to a delightful 90 minutes by director Sahem Ali, the production's cast also includes Daphne Rubin-Vega, Junior Nyong'o, b, Khris Davis, John Ellison Conlee, Ariyan Kassam, Valentino Musumeci, Moses Sumney, Kapil Talwalker and Joe Tapper. PBS's Great Performances series this year also includes several more offerings that should thrill theater lovers. The series premieres October 3 with the documentary The Magic of Grace Bumbry, about the first Black opera singer to perform at the White House, followed November 7 by The Tiler Peck Story: Suspending Time, about the ballerina (most recently seen on Prime Video's series Etoile). A live capture of the Carnegie Hall concert The Great War and The Great Gatsby will premiere on November 11, Veterans' Day, a fitting choice for a concert that uses The Great Gatsby to explore World War I. And Dick Van Dyke takes center stage December 12 with Starring Dick Van Dyke, an American Masters episode celebrating the beloved entertainer's 100th birthday, featuring rare footage. And December 16 sees the premiere of the English National Ballet's production of The Nutcracker.


CBS News
15-07-2025
- Entertainment
- CBS News
NYC's beloved Central Park institution the Delacorte Theater returns after 2-year renovation
The Delacorte Theater, a beloved Central Park landmark, is back after a nearly two-year renovation. The 63-year-old theater has been revamped and will reopen just in time for the return of Shakespeare in the Park. The theater had been showing its age, with a leaky roof, outdated equipment and limited access for people with disabilities. So two years ago, crews started rebuilding the new theater, installing accessible seating ramps, lifts, elevators and new bathrooms, as well as larger dressing rooms, and a climate control system to keep performers and crew comfortable, rain or shine. "We did it. We rebuilt the Delacorte," board member Arielle Tepper. "It is accessible because it needs to belong to everybody," artistic director Oskar Eustis said. "This renovation which is so important to us had made a theater which is free, because theater itself, and everything in it, is the property of the people of New York. You own it." "In new seats and stage, for all New York to see. Our hearts and democracy restored through Shakespeare," Comptroller Brad Lander said. The theater's major update was celebrated at a ribbon cutting, which was attended by the all-star cast who will soon begin performing "Twelfth Night." "I just want to say I'm really glad we're doing a comedy this summer," actor Peter Dinklage said. Sandra Oh of "Grey's Anatomy" and Jesse Tyler Ferguson of "Modern Family" are also in the cast. The Delacorte first opened in 1962 with the goal of bringing theater to everyone. Since then, more than 160 productions have graced the stage, featuring legends like Denzel Washington, Meryl Streep and Morgan Freeman. Now, with a fresh look and the same Shakespearean spirit, the Delacorte is ready to take center stage once again. "Twelfth Night" kicks off Aug. 7. To get tickets, you can enter the digital lottery on the Public Theater's website or the TodayTix app, or visit a distribution site in Central Park, a city library, or downtown at the Public Theater box office. There's also a standby line on the day of each performance. For more information, CLICK HERE.


Time Out
15-07-2025
- Entertainment
- Time Out
First look: Peek inside the newly renovated Delacorte Theater in Central Park
Central Park's newly renovated Delacorte Theater doesn't just look better; it feels better and even smells better. After an 18-month renovation, the beloved venue run by The Public Theater is set open on August 7 for Shakespeare in the Park's free performances of Twelfth Night. We got a sneak peek inside the freshly updated space today. At a ribbon-cutting ceremony, the Public's Oskar Eustis described the Delacorte as "a palace for the people—and the people deserve the best." The renovation focused on improving accessibility and modernizing the space for artists and audiences. Luis Miranda, The Public's board chairman, credited a $42 million investment from local government leaders to help make it possible. Before even stepping foot inside, the theater's new curb appeal is obvious. Beautiful redwood reclaimed from decommissioned NYC water towers across the five boroughs has replaced the former gray siding, offering the added bonus of a fresh aroma. Accessibility was a major priority for the update, and every part of the space is now accessible, from the seating to the light booth to the dressing rooms. Two new gates offer accessibly entry, and the number of ADA seats has more than doubled. Plus, the renovation added additional ramps, lifts, and elevators for artists and crew. A palace for the people—and the people deserve the best "The new Delacorte experience is better for the audience. It's better for the performers, designers, crew, staff, and most importantly, we are now ready for what comes next. We're here for the next generation," said Arielle Tepper, former board chair at The Public. "It is about making sure that everyone feels welcome here at the Delacorte, no matter who they are, where they're from, or if they've never seen live theater before." And theatergoers, women in particular, will be delighted by the newly updated bathrooms. The renovation doubled the amount of restroom facilities for women, solving bottlenecks that existed during intermission. View this post on Instagram A post shared by The Public Theater (@publictheaterny) While the renovation is about looking to the future, Eustis took a moment to reflect on the past. He remembered the legacy of Joe Papp, who faced great obstacles to keep his free New York Shakespeare Festival running, eventually evolving into the free Shakespeare in the Park we know today. His conviction, Eustis said, was that "Shakespeare should belong to everybody." He insisted upon casting shows to look like the demographic makeup of the city itself. "The culture belongs to everybody and that to even charge a nickel for it, to put that much of an economic barrier, would be to fundamentally contradict the basic idea of the Shakespeare Festival, which is that the culture is everybody's property," Eustis said. The Delacorte Theater officially opened in Central Park on June 18, 1962, with The Merchant of Venice, directed by Papp and Gladys Vaughan and featuring George C. Scott as Shylock. In the years since, more than 150 productions have been presented for free at The Delacorte, featuring stars such as James Earl Jones (in Othello, 1964), Meryl Streep (The Taming of the Shrew, 1978); Denzel Washington (Richard III in 1990), Anne Hathaway (Twelfth Night, 2009); Al Pacino (The Merchant of Venice, 2010); and many more. Though theatrical performances won't begin for a few weeks, the audience at today's ribbon cutting was treated to Shakespeare readings by Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Peter Dinklage, Lupita Nyong'o, and Sandra Oh—all of whom will perform in this year's showing of Twelfth Night. This year's free series runs from August 7 through September 14. New York City's Comptroller Brad Lander was so inspired by the Shakespeare spirit, he recited a sonnet he wrote for the occasion. As he read: "What a time to reopen this stage with enemies of culture on the prowl, pitting fear and faux populist rage against empathy and attack most foul. Our tyrant locks up immigrants, comptrollers too, and sows chaos, no matter the cost. So what's a public theater to do to ensure that our democracy is not lost? Happily, one answer is right here in new seats and stage for all New York to see, our hearts and our democracy restored through Shakespeare that uplifts us all for free."