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Tennessee Performing Arts Center

Coordinates:36°09′54″N86°46′54″W / 36.1649°N 86.7817°W /36.1649; -86.7817
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Arts center in Nashville, Tennessee, US
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Tennessee Performing Arts Center
Map
Interactive map of Tennessee Performing Arts Center
Address505 Deaderick Street
Nashville,Tennessee
United States
Coordinates36°09′54″N86°46′54″W / 36.1649°N 86.7817°W /36.1649; -86.7817
TypePerforming arts center
CapacityAndrew Jackson Hall: 2,472
James K. Polk Theater: 1,075
Andrew Johnson Theater: 256
Construction
Opened1980
Website
www.tpac.org

TheTennessee Performing Arts Center (TPAC) is located in theJames K. Polk Cultural Center at 505 Deaderick Street in downtownNashville, Tennessee. It occupies a city block between 5th and 6th Avenues North and Deaderick and Union Streets. The cultural center adjoins the 18-storyJames K. Polk State Office Building.

History

[edit]

In the early 1800s, the site was where the fourth mayor of Nashville,Joseph T. Elliston, lived with his wife Louisa and their sonWilliam R. Elliston until they moved toBurlington, their plantation in mid-town Nashville.[1]

The idea for a large-scale performing arts facility developed in 1972, whenMartha Rivers Ingram was appointed to the advisory board of theKennedy Center for the Performing Arts inWashington, D.C., and proposed a similar center for her home city of Nashville. Ingram's proposal involved a public-private partnership that would operate within a state-owned facility. Her idea was met with considerable resistance, but she persevered for eight years and throughout the terms of three governors. The result is the Tennessee Performing Arts Center, a three-theater facility located beneath a state office building across the street from theTennessee State Capitol.[2] In 1980, TPAC opened as the state's premier theater venue.

Among its operations, TPAC presents a series of touring Broadway shows and special engagements, and administers a comprehensive education program.

Martha Rivers Ingram and her supporters also raised an endowment to defray operating losses and to fund a program that grooms future audiences for TPAC performances. The endowment goal was $3.5 million, and they surpassed it, raising $5 million. Today,[when?] the endowment has grown to $20 million. Each year, more than 100,000 students, from kindergarten through 12th grade, are brought to Nashville for performances by theNashville Ballet, the Nashville Opera, and the Nashville Repertory Theatre, which are all resident performing arts groups of TPAC and provide year-round programming. Other companies also use TPAC's facilities for plays, dance performances, concerts, and other cultural programs.

The Tennessee Performing Arts Center Management Corporation is governed by a 27-member Board of Directors. Directors serve for a term of three years.[3]

Performance venues

[edit]

The performance venues are named for the threePresidents of the United States who hailed fromTennessee:

Andrew Jackson Hall

[edit]

Andrew Jackson Hall is the largest of TPAC's multi-purpose theaters with a seating capacity of 2,472 seats, including 47 pit seats. The stage is more than 130 feet wide by 53 feet deep. The stage has a proscenium opening of more than 57 feet by 36 feet.

James K. Polk Theater

[edit]
TPAC's Polk Theater

James K. Polk Theater has a seating capacity of 1,075 seats, including 44 pit seats. The stage is more than 87 feet by 50 feet, with a proscenium opening of nearly 47 feet by 30 feet.

Andrew Johnson Theater

[edit]
TPAC's Johnson Theater

Andrew Johnson Theater is TPAC's smallest theater. The 59' x 54' center open floor performing space is surrounded by three sides with banks of theater seating. With seating up to 256 configurable seats.

War Memorial Auditorium

[edit]

TPAC also governs theWar Memorial Auditorium (1,661 seats), a historic building that anchors the War Memorial Plaza, adjacent to Nashville's capitol building and across 6th Avenue from the Tennessee Performing Arts Center.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Davis, Louise (August 14, 1983)."Early Silversmiths Left Marks on City. Names of Elliston, Calhoun Figure Big in Nashville History".The Tennessean. pp. 93–94. RetrievedApril 14, 2018 – viaNewspapers.com.
  2. ^"South Carolina ETV". RetrievedOctober 17, 2016.
  3. ^"TPAC Board of Directors".Tennessee Performing Arts Center.

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