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Starlight Theatre (Kansas City, Missouri)

Coordinates:39°00′28″N94°32′05″W / 39.007813°N 94.5348°W /39.007813; -94.5348
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Theater in Kansas City, Missouri, United States

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Starlight Theatre
Map
Interactive map of Starlight Theatre
Location4600 Starlight Road
Kansas City, Missouri 64132
Coordinates39°00′28″N94°32′05″W / 39.007813°N 94.5348°W /39.007813; -94.5348
OwnerCity of Kansas City, Missouri
OperatorStarlight Theatre Association
Live Nation (concert booking)
CapacityStarlight: 7,739
Cohen: 1,200
Construction
Broke ground1925
OpenedJune 4, 1950
Construction cost$1.5 million
ArchitectEdward Buehler Delk
Tenants
Broadway Shows
Concerts
Starlight Indoors
Community Engagement Programming
Website
www.kcstarlight.com

Starlight Theatre is a 7,739-seat[1] outdoortheater inKansas City, Missouri,United States that presentsBroadway shows and concerts. It is one of the two major remaining self-producing outdoor theatres in the U.S. and Starlight's Cohen stagehouse also permits it to present many national Broadway touring shows.

History

[edit]
Starlight Theatre stage

Starlight Theatre's history starts in 1925, the yearRomania’sQueen Marie paid a visit toKansas City. To celebrate her arrival, the Kansas City Federation of Music organized a showcase of local talent for the Queen that was also open to the public.

Profits from the showcase were then placed in the city trust and proposals for the location of Kansas City’s outdoor theater began. One suggested site was whereKansas City Art Institute now stands, but area residents disapproved of building such a large structure in their neighborhood. Another possible location was just north ofUniversity of Missouri–Kansas City, although these plans were also shelved because officials feared the theater would compete with the newly completedMunicipal Auditorium.

After 15 years of proposals, the need for a venue to house celebrations commemorating Kansas City’s 100th birthday sped up the process. A committee was quickly chosen,Swope Park was deemed the location, and construction began in December 1949. On June 3rd, 1950, in a facility not yet fully complete, the historical revue,Thrills of a Century, opened at Starlight Theatre in celebration of Kansas City’s 100th birthday. The show played nightly through July 10. Hundreds of local citizens participated in the pageant, and thousands turned out each night. Show highlights included the staging of the Battle of Westport, and the original locomotive that crossed the Hannibal Bridge 81 years before chugging across the stage on specially built rails.

Following the success ofThrills of a Century, the Starlight Theatre Association of Kansas City, Inc., was formed as a501(c)(3)nonprofit organization. John A. Moore was elected as the association’s first president, and New York veteran Richard Berger was hired as Starlight’s first producing director, a position he would hold through 1971.

Starlight opened its first Broadway season with the performance ofThe Desert Song on June 25, 1951.

In 1958,Jerry Lewis paid for a stage extension that covered the orchestra pit. In the early 1980s, the stage was permanently extended over the orchestra pit, bringing on stage action closer to the audience. This extension lasted until the building of the 10-story Jeannette and Jerome Cohen Community Stage in 2000.

During the 1960s production of the musicalMr. President, PresidentHarry S. Truman made a guest appearance in the opening night show. An attack of appendicitis forced Truman to leave Starlight by ambulance during the intermission.[2]

Starlight is one of two self-producing outdoor theaters in the U.S.[3][4]

The addition of the Jeannette and Jerome Cohen Community Stage in 2000 made it one of the largest roadhouses in the country. Starlight began presenting major national tours in 2000 to bring more recent and contemporary Broadway musicals to Kansas City.

To provide entertainment year-round to current patrons and new audiences, Starlight created a live indoor theater series called Starlight Indoors that premiered in 2015. It features small comedies, musicals, parodies and other unconventional shows, and is presented inside the heated performance space of Starlight’s Cohen Community Stage House.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Technical Specifications
  2. ^Roe, Dr. Jason."Starry, Starry Nights".The Kansas City Public Library. Archived fromthe original on September 21, 2015. RetrievedJune 3, 2015.
  3. ^"Starlight's History".Starlight.
  4. ^Cole, Suzanne P.; Engle, Tim; Winkler, Eric (April 23, 2012)."50 things every Kansas Citian should know".Kansas City Star. Archived fromthe original on May 7, 2012. RetrievedApril 23, 2012.

External links

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