This article needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(October 2023) |
Capital Theatre(1927-89) | |
Logo prior to 2022 | |
![]() Interactive map of Capitol Center for the Arts | |
| Address | 44 South Main St. Concord, New Hampshire |
|---|---|
| Type | Performing arts center |
| Capacity |
|
| Construction | |
| Opened | 1927 |
| Reopened | November 1995 |
| Website | |
| ccanh | |

TheCapitol Center for the Arts is an entertainment venue inConcord,New Hampshire, United States, which features a 1,304-seat theatre designed with an Egyptian motif. The center opened in its current form in 1995 after a multiyear renovation of the Capitol Theatre, which had existed in the same location from 1927 to 1989. The theatre is equipped to host major Broadway shows, and has played host to theBilly Joel musicalMovin' Out, pianistGeorge Winston, and humoristDavid Sedaris.
The renovation of the Capitol Center was made possible by $4.2 million in donations received for the then-newly formed center, withChubb Life providing the majority of the support. The Chubb Theatre was named in honor of the company that made the center possible. Volunteers, some 250 of them, also contributed 3,000 hours of service to repaint the interior and restore the Egyptian motif.Paul Hodes, who subsequently became acongressman from New Hampshire, was also instrumental in the renovation and reopening of the center, heading up the effort at the urging of fellow lawyer and patron of the arts Martin L. Gross of Concord.[1]
In 2019, the Capitol Center for the Arts opened a new venue, the BNH Stage at 16 S Main Street in Concord.
The Capitol Theatre, as well as the Star Theatre around the corner, were part of a chain owned byJoseph P. Kennedy's Maine-New Hampshire Theatres Co.
In a piece written in 2011, remembering back to the 1950s and 1960s, Paul E. Brogan wrote that "the Capitol Theatre still bore signs of the elegance and lushness that had earned it acclaim when it opened, replete with apipe organ and stage presentations before the film."[2]
43°12′04″N71°32′06″W / 43.20111°N 71.53500°W /43.20111; -71.53500
This article about atheater building in the United States is astub. You can help Wikipedia byexpanding it. |