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Severance Hall

Coordinates:41°30′23″N81°36′34″W / 41.50639°N 81.60944°W /41.50639; -81.60944
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Concert hall in Cleveland, Ohio, US

Severance Music Center
Map
Address11001 Euclid Avenue
Cleveland, Ohio
United States
Coordinates41°30′23″N81°36′34″W / 41.50639°N 81.60944°W /41.50639; -81.60944
OwnerMusical Arts Association
OperatorCleveland Orchestra
CapacityConcert hall: 2,000
Reinberger Chamber Hall: 402
Construction
OpenedFebruary 5, 1931 (1931-02-05)
Reopened2000
ArchitectWalker and Weeks
Website
clevelandorchestra.com

Severance Hall, also known asSeverance Music Center,[1] is a concert hall in theUniversity Circle neighborhood ofCleveland, Ohio, home to theCleveland Orchestra. Opened in 1931 to give the orchestra a permanent home, the building is named for patronsJohn L. Severance and his wife, Elisabeth Huntingdon DeWitt Severance.[2] It is listed on theNational Register of Historic Places as part of Cleveland’sWade Park District.[3]

In addition to serving as the Cleveland Orchestra’s home and as a commencement site forCase Western Reserve University, Severance Hall is available to rent for concerts, weddings, corporate events, and receptions. On Severance Hall’s ground floor is Reinberger Chamber Hall, a separate 402-seat auditorium that is frequently used for more intimate performances and pre-concert lectures.

History

[edit]
Grand Foyer

Founded in 1918, the Cleveland Orchestra first performed atGrays Armory in downtown Cleveland and moved to the Masonic Auditorium for concerts during the 1920s.[4] But both buildings also hosted other types of events that occasionally created scheduling conflicts for the Orchestra, including, most famously, twice when the ensemble had to find an alternate location because of a poultry exhibition.[5] The Orchestra’s administration soon came to realize the advantages that having a permanent concert hall would bring to the ensemble's performances, rehearsals, and radio broadcasts.

After encouragement from Cleveland Orchestra founderAdella Prentiss Hughes and music directorNikolai Sokoloff, plans for Severance Hall began to emerge based on a plot of land offered by Western Reserve University (nowCase Western Reserve University) at a leasing cost of $1.00 per year[2] and potential funds contributed by the general public and local philanthropists.[6] During a gala concert celebrating the Orchestra’s tenth-anniversary, Dudley Blossom, an early benefactor, announced thatJohn L. Severance, president of the Musical Arts Association, and his wife, Elisabeth, had pledged $1 million to the construction of a new hall.[7] In support of an associated fundraising campaign, Blossom and his wife donated $750,000 the following day.[7] Though Elisabeth Severance died in 1929, John Severance was determined to see the project through to its completion and intended for the concert hall to serve as ade facto memorial to his late wife. Despite acollapse of the United States’ economy in 1929, the groundbreaking for Severance Hall was held on November 14, 1929 and Severance’s contribution eventually ballooned to more than $2.6 million.[8] The concert hall was designed by the Cleveland firm ofWalker & Weeks,[9] which had also built Cleveland’sFederal Reserve Bank andPublic Library.[10] Severance Hall opened on February 5, 1931, hosting a gala concert broadcast live across the radio to mark the occasion.[11]

Renovations

[edit]

As the use of taxis and chauffeured vehicles declined, Severance Hall’s tiled drive-through entrance was closed in 1970. A dining area was created in the resulting space. Later, one of the access corridors on the ground floor was converted into a dressing room for female orchestra members (harpistAlice Chalifoux had used her instrument case to dress in the late 1930s and early 1940s, when she was one of the few women in the ensemble).[12]

Beginning in 1998, Severance Hall underwent an extensive two-year, $36 million restoration and expansion led by architectDavid M. Schwarz.  The renovated building reopened in January 2000, winning a National Preservation Honor Award.[13]  The most significant aesthetic change was the replacement of the “Szell Shell” with a new shell that combined the acoustics of the old model with a decorative style in harmony with the rest of the hall.[14] The stage included a place for the relocation of the Orchestra’s newly-restored Ernest M. Skinner organ.[15]  The project also created a street-level lobby, a new restaurant, and additional offices for the Orchestra’s administrative staff.[14]

On September 30, 2021, the Cleveland Orchestra and Musical Arts Association announced that it would rename the venueSeverance Music Center.[16][17]

Architecture

[edit]
Concert stage of Severance Hall
Stage of Reinberger Chamber Hall

Designed by Cleveland firmWalker and Weeks, Severance Music Center is located at the intersection ofEuclid Avenue and East Boulevard. The front entrance features a grand lobby in the form of a domed rotunda, with the main auditorium and various service spaces spread out in a conjoined fan. The building’s exterior was designed to complement the nearby Cleveland Museum of Art, featuring a neoclassical portico[18] and anArt Deco relief byNew York sculptorHenry Hering.

The interior of Severance Hall features a variety of architectural styles, includingArt Deco and elements ofEgyptian Revival.  The Grand Foyer is surrounded by marble columns and decorated with papyrus and lotus flower patterns that are used in a number of places.[19] The main concert hall features a silvery aluminum leaf ceiling with designs based on 18th-century English point lace.[19][20][21]

Acoustics

[edit]

Shortly after the opening of Severance Hall, several acoustic problems were noted. These were attributed to the use of velvet curtains in audience boxes, thick carpet across much of the hall, and a large, sound-absorbing fly space located above the stage.[22] In addition, removable shells created for the Orchestra were constructed of materials that didn't reflect sound. Finally, the 6,025-pipeErnest M. Skinner organ could be heard, but its positioning outside the auditorium itself was experimental and limited the options for addressing the auditorium's dry acoustics.[23]

"The Szell Shell" photographed at the end of construction in 1958.

In 1958, at the prompting of music directorGeorge Szell, an acoustical redesign of the hall was undertaken.  To make the auditorium more resonant, the original proscenium and blue velvet curtains were removed and the use of carpet was reduced to a minimum.[24] On the stage, a permanent acoustical shell was built — affectionately known as “The Szell Shell” — which consisted of thick wooden walls formed in a series of convex curves.[25] To make the walls less absorbent and more reflective of sound, they were filled with sand. The result was a more vibrant-sounding space which complemented the Orchestra’s tone under Szell's direction.[26]

Visually, though, the newModernist stage clashed with the elegant Art Deco design of the concert hall. In addition, the organ's pipe chambers were effectively sealed off from the auditorium by the new shell — rendering the organ non-functional unless its sound was transmitted into the auditorium through microphones and speakers.[26]

Use in film

[edit]

Severance Hall was featured in the1997Harrison Ford filmAir Force One.[27] The scene during theopening credits shows a night-time military raid on the presidential palace of the leader ofKazakhstan. Severance Hall's roof, with additional architectural elements added as set-dressing, was chosen to depict the palace.

A segment of theCirque du Soleil film,The Journey of Man, was filmed in the main lobby. Shot in 1999 inIMAX, the segmentBanquine, utilized the 40 foot ceilings in the Bogomolny-Kozerefski Grand Foyer.[citation needed]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Queue-it".
  2. ^ab(Rosenberg 2000, p. 104)
  3. ^Cash, Bobby"Teaching & Learning Cleveland | Severance Hall Historical Site". Archived fromthe original on March 20, 2012. RetrievedJuly 10, 2011., "Severance Hall Historical Site," in Teaching & Learning Cleveland, Item #564. February 2009.
  4. ^(Rosenberg 2000, pp. 100–101)
  5. ^(Rosenberg 2000, pp. 99–100)
  6. ^(Rosenberg 2000, pp. 102–104)
  7. ^ab(Rosenberg 2000, p. 99)
  8. ^(Rosenberg 2000, p. 110)
  9. ^(Rosenberg 2000, p. 105)
  10. ^(Rosenberg 2000, p. 107)
  11. ^(Rosenberg 2000, pp. 112–113)
  12. ^(Rosenberg 2000, p. 354)
  13. ^Cleveland Landmark Wins National Preservation Award.National Trust for Historic Preservation. 2001-10-01.
  14. ^ab(Rosenberg 2000, p. 538)
  15. ^"From the Project Archives: Severance Hall, Cleveland, Ohio". Schantz Organ Company. Archived fromthe original on October 20, 2007. RetrievedOctober 2, 2010.
  16. ^"Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Foundation Gives Historic $50 Million Grant to The Cleveland Orchestra" (Press release). The Cleveland Orchestra and Musical Arts Association. September 30, 2021. RetrievedOctober 14, 2021.
  17. ^Lewis, Zachary (September 30, 2021)."Cleveland Orchestra to rename Severance Hall after receiving $50 million gift from Mandel Foundation".The Plain Dealer. RetrievedOctober 14, 2021.
  18. ^(Rosenberg 2000, p. 108)
  19. ^ab(Rosenberg 2000, pp. 108–109)
  20. ^Cleveland Architecture, 1876-1976: 1876-1976, By Eric Johannesen, Western Reserve Historical Society, 1979, p. 163
  21. ^A Cleveland Legacy: The Architecture of Walker and Weeks, By Eric Johannesen, Kent State University Press, 1999, p. 195
  22. ^(Rosenberg 2000, p. 114)
  23. ^(Rosenberg 2000, pp. 106–107)
  24. ^(Rosenberg 2000, pp. 300–301)
  25. ^(Rosenberg 2000, p. 300)
  26. ^ab(Rosenberg 2000, p. 302)
  27. ^"Cleveland: Severance Hall".Classic FM. RetrievedDecember 3, 2019.

External links

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