
Facade of Dock Street at 135 Church Street Photo: William Struhs
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The Dock Street Theater
Charleston's Dock Street Theatre was the first
theater building designed solely for theatrical performances in
America. Its rich history reflects the theatrical tradition and
cultural history of Charleston and America from the 1700s through
the millennium.
The present Dock Street Theatre, now at 135 Church
Street in downtown Charleston, is built on the site of the original
theater building. On February 12, 1736, a bawdy Restoration farce,
"The Recruiting Officer," by George Farhquar, opened at the new
theater on Dock Street, according to the local newspaper of that
day. The theater, located at the corner of Church and Dock streets
facing Dock Street (now Queen street), showed plays and operas for
the next two years. After that the theater's fate is uncertain, but
presumed lost in the great fire of 1740 which destroyed the city's
historic French quarter.
Soon after 1800, on this same site, a hotel was
built. In 1835, the hotel was remodeled and a wrought iron balcony
was added on its Church Street side. For fifty years, the hotel
reigned as the principal hotel in Charleston, frequented by
plantation owners, seafaring merchants and other travelers. Among
the hotel's more famous guests was Junius Brutus Booth, a traveling
actor and the father of the notorious John Wilkes Booth. Following
the Civil War, the Planters Hotel, as it was called, fell into
ruin.
During the1920s and 1930s, Charleston citizens became
interested in preserving the city's heritage. At the urging of
local historians, the City of Charleston purchased the old Planters
Hotel, and identified the former theater building as a project
worthy of restoration. It became an enterprise of the Federal
Emergency Relief Administration in 1935, and was completed with
funds from the Works Progress Administration. The new structure was
modeled after a composite of London's 18th century theaters,
designed with a "pit" for the common people, a "gallery" for women,
and "boxes" at the balcony level for the city's elite, but fitted
with modern technical equipment. Local architect Alfred Simons
re-created the theater with beautiful woodwork carved from native
Cypress trees, or salvaged architectural items from Charleston's
antebellum mansions.
On November 26, 1937, the restored Dock Street
Theatre opened with a reprise of the original Farqhuar play,
performed by the theater's new resident company, the Footlight
Players. Members of the Charleston Symphony, who performed as the
theater's orchestra, wore 18th century costumes.
A Rockefeller grant installed Dubose Heyward as
resident writer. Heyward his wife Dorothy were famous for writing
the play "Porgy and Bess," which George and Ira Gershwin used as the
basis of their American opera. The theater's programming included
artists, such as dancers Ruth St. Denis and Martha Graham. Until
the 1970s, Emmett Edward Robinson was the theater's managing
director who handled programming, and also the Footlight Players
productions. In 1978, Julian Wiles, who had worked closely with
Robinson, founded the Charleston Stage Company, which is now one of
the state's largest arts organizations. The company presents 120
performances at the Dock Street Theatre each season.
The theater is owned and now managed by the City of
Charleston. It houses arts organizations on its third floor and the
city's office of cultural affairs, which produces both the annual
Piccolo and Moja festivals, which have some performances at the
theater. The annual Spoleto Festival USA also holds concerts and
performances at the theater. Each year, more than 600 events are
performed at the Dock Street Theatre for about 100,000 theater
patrons.
Project documentation includes a detailed report on
the theater's cultural history, with a combined chronology of the
theater and Charleston history; a video diskette with about 50
color images; promotional literature; and festival and play
programs.
Originally submitted by: Ernest F. Hollings, Senator.
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The Local Legacies project provides a "snapshot" of American Culture as it was expressed in spring of 2000. Consequently, it is not being updated with new or revised information with the exception of "Related Website" links.
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