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Lyric Theatre (New York City, 1998)

The Lyric Theatre (previously known as the Ford Center for the Performing Arts, the Hilton Theatre, and the Foxwoods Theatre) is a Broadway theater at 214 West 43rd Street in the Theater District of Midtown Manhattan in New York City. Opened in 1998, the theater was designed by Richard Lewis Blinder of Beyer Blinder Belle, in collaboration with Peter Kofman, for Garth Drabinsky and his company Livent. The Lyric Theatre was built using parts of two former theaters on the site: the Apollo Theatre, built in 1920 to a design by Eugene De Rosa, and the old Lyric Theatre, built in 1903 to a design by Victor Hugo Koehler. The theater contains 1,622 seats across three levels and is operated by ATG Entertainment. The theater building is owned by the city and state governments of New York and was developed by New 42nd Street.

Address

214 West 43rd Street
Manhattan, New York City
United States

City and State of New York[1]

1,622 (original capacity 1,821)

January 18, 1998

1998–present

Despite having the same name as one of its predecessor theaters, the current Lyric Theatre was built almost entirely from scratch, though many parts of the old theaters were preserved to comply with government regulations. The current theater retains the original Lyric facade on 43rd Street, as well as a smaller arched facade on 42nd Street. The auditorium and stage house are placed within an entirely new structure covered with concrete and brick panels. The lobby contains a domed rotunda, with a basement lounge underneath it. The auditorium contains elements from the old Lyric's and the Apollo's interiors, including a ceiling dome, boxes, and a proscenium arch, which were modified to fit the new theater's dimensions. The large stage and the accompanying stage house were designed to accommodate major musicals.


The old Lyric and Apollo theaters had been proposed for redevelopment since the 1970s, and New 42nd Street took over the theaters in 1990. Livent leased the theaters in 1995, razing them to make way for an 1,821-seat facility named after sponsor Ford Motor Company. The Ford Center was dedicated in December 1997 and officially opened the next month. Livent filed for bankruptcy in late 1998, and the theater subsequently passed to SFX Entertainment and then Clear Channel Entertainment, which renamed it for sponsor Hilton Hotels & Resorts in 2005. The venue was renamed after Foxwoods Resort Casino in 2010 as part of a partnership with Live Nation. ATG acquired the theater in 2013 and renamed it the Lyric the following year. The Lyric's capacity was reduced in a 2017 renovation because of complaints about the theater's excessive size, which had caused several of the theater's productions to lose money.

Box office records[edit]

In 2012, Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark achieved the box office record for the Foxwoods Theatre (and the record for the highest single-week gross of any show in Broadway history, at that time).[196][197] The production grossed $2,941,794 over nine performances at 100.03% capacity for the week ending January 1, 2012.[198]


On its third week of previews, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child had the highest single-week gross reported by a non-musical play in Broadway history, grossing $2,138,859 over eight performances for the week ending April 8, 2018.[199][200] As of January 2024, Cursed Child's largest single gross is $2,718,487 over eight performances for the week ending December 31, 2023.[201]

List of Broadway theaters

Amelar, Sarah (March 1998). (PDF). Architecture. Vol. 87, no. 3. pp. 146–150. ProQuest 227880056.

"Reclamation on 42nd Street"

Botto, Louis; Mitchell, Brian Stokes (2002). . New York; Milwaukee, WI: Applause Theatre & Cinema Books/Playbill. ISBN 978-1-55783-566-6.

At This Theatre: 100 Years of Broadway Shows, Stories and Stars

Dunlap, David W. (December 14, 1997). . The New York Times. pp. 1, 8. ISSN 0362-4331.

"Theater; With a Lavish Bow to the Past, A Broadway Palace Is Built"

Henderson, Mary C.; Greene, Alexis (2008). . New York: Back Stage Books. ISBN 978-0-8230-3072-9. OCLC 190860159.

The story of 42nd Street : the theaters, shows, characters, and scandals of the world's most notorious street

Lampert-Greaux, Ellen (July 1998). "The Ford Center for the Performing Arts". TCI. Vol. 32, no. 7. pp. 32–35.

Madigan, M. J. (March 1998). "Ford Center for the Performing Arts". Interiors. Vol. 157, no. 3. pp. 88–93.  221545535.

ProQuest

Morrison, William (1999). Broadway Theatres: History and Architecture. Dover Publications.  0-486-40244-4.

ISBN

Stern, Robert A. M.; Fishman, David; Tilove, Jacob (2006). . New York: Monacelli Press. pp. 675, 678–679, 691–693, 706–708. ISBN 978-1-58093-177-9. OCLC 70267065. OL 22741487M.

New York 2000: Architecture and Urbanism Between the Bicentennial and the Millennium

Van Hoogstraten, Nicholas (1997). Lost Broadway Theatres. Princeton Architectural Press.  1-56898-116-3.

ISBN

Official website

at the Internet Broadway Database

Lyric Theatre