The Guthrie Theater is a venue for staging plays in Minneapolis, Minnesota. It was the result of Sir Tyrone Guthrie's desire for a new kind of theater that would provide an atmosphere which would encourage the production of great works of literature and cultivate actors' talents away from the more commercial environment of Broadway where increasing production costs demanded profitability over artistic content. The Guthrie Theater first opened its doors on May 7, 1963 with a production of Hamlet with George Grizzard playing the lead and directed by Tyrone Guthrie himself. The Guthrie Theatre will be moving to its new three-theatre complex after the 2006 production of Hamlet closes on May 7, 2006. Hamlet will be played by University of Minnesota/Guthrie Theater BFA Actor Training Program graduate, Santino Fontana and is directed by Artistic Director Joe Dowling.
Paired with an innovative philosophy that included a resident acting company with high professional standards was a unique design concept in the stage itself.
Guthrie selected architect Ralph Rapson to design the new theater. Rapson was a leading contributor to architecture's modern movement on the East Coast from the late 1940s through the 1950s, and served as head of the University of Minnesota School of Architecture in the late 1950s. Rapson had also worked on some preliminary sketches of the Walker Art Center, who donated some land for the Guthrie's construction. Guthrie and Rapson selected a modified theater in the round design that featured a thrust stage projecting from a back wall with seating surrounding nearly two thirds of it.
Throughout the 1960s the Guthrie found critical acclaim in its productions of Henry V, St. Joan, Caucasian Chalk Circle, Three Sisters and especially The House of Atreus. In 1968 the production of The House of Atreus was taken on the road in a national tour that was a first for a resident theater. Also starting in 1968 the Guthrie started producing a series of plays done on smaller stages in the Twin Cities area, Crawford-Livingston Theater and The Other Place. In 1971, Michael Langham became Artistic Director and produced highly successful classics including Oedipus the King, Love's Labour's Lost, She Stoops to Conquer, and A Streetcar Named Desire. Langham was a friend and colleague of Guthrie and continued the tradition of using a repertoire of actors. After Langham left in 1977, the Guthrie crossed a milestone of sorts when for the first time it selected an artistic director that was not a respected collaborator or friend of the Tyrone Guthrie. That year Alvin Epstein was selected as Artistic Director and was the first American to fill that role.
In 1980 Liviu Ciulei replaced Epstein. Ciulei was the former Artistic Director of the Bulandra Theatre in Romania and had a profound influence on the Guthrie theater. He challenged audiences with his bold theatrical interpretations and his highly contemporary and international style. Ciulei's intense interest in theater didn't stop at the productions themselves, he was a world-class designer and architect and one of the first things he did was to redesign the theater itself. His changes allowed more structural flexibility in the stage to allow each production a unique physical presentation. While Ciulei was not able to attain all the goals he had envisioned, he was able to maintain and advance the Guthrie's national and international reputation as a first-rate example of American Theater and drew critical success with productions of classics such as Peer Gynt, The Marriage of Figaro, A Midsummer Night's Dream, The Seagull, and Tartuffe. He also was able to reestablish the Guthrie’s commitment to acting ensembles by gathering together a rotating repertory in his last season as Artistic Director in 1985.
That year the Guthrie turned to Garland Wright who had spent some time as Liviu Ciulei’s Associate Artistic Director in the early 1980s as Ciulei's replacement. Wright had shared a vision with Ciulei that included the desire to have a second, smaller stage that could act as a lab to enable the exploration of new work and performance techniques. Born out of this vision was the Guthrie Laboratory located in the Minneapolis Warehouse District. Wright also shared a desire to keep the concept of a resident acting company alive and used his ensembles to great effect. He was able to combine critical and popular success with a series of productions that helped reestablish a large, enthusiastic and loyal audience base. Productions from this period include The Misanthrope, Richard III, The Screens, and a trilogy of Richard II, Henry IV (Parts I and II) and Henry V, Medea and As You Like It. Wright also created a series of outreach programs designed to garner interest in theater among young people and involving high school and colleague instructors to help instill a theater-going habit. During this time the Guthrie also had a $3.5 million facelift that maintained Tyrone Guthrie's desire for an intimate theater-going experience.
Garland Wright announced his resignation in 1994 and after an international search for his successor, Irish director Joe Dowling was chosen as the Guthrie's seventh Artistic Director. Dowling had gained an international reputation with his work at Ireland's national theater, The Abbey Theater, including becoming the Abbey's youngest Artistic Director in its long history. Dowling continued the Guthrie's commitment to repertory theater and presided over a return to national touring. Along with an increase in the number of the theaters subscribers to a new high of 32,000, his production of Shakespeare's Hamlet, in 2006, is the Guthrie's most-attended play ever.
On May 7th 2006 the Guthrie Theater's current location closed following a final performance of "Hamlet". The new Guthrie openned on July 15th 2006 with a production of "The Great Gatsby".
Landmarks in Minnesota | Minneapolis, Minnesota | Theatres in Minnesota | League of Resident Theatres
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