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Saturday, October 17, 2009 , Updated

Partnering architect of Wyly Theater in Dallas’ Arts Center summarizes its good points

— During the AT&T Performing Arts Center's Dee and Charles Wyly Theater's grand opening this week, audiences are discovering a 575-seat, "multi-form" theater that gives one of the country's most innovative performing arts companies an unprecedented reconfiguration of both house and stage.

Unlike a typical theater, the Wyly positions back-of-house and front-of-house facilities above and beneath the auditorium instead of encircling it. Designed by REX/OMA, Joshua Prince-Ramus (partner in charge) and Rem Koolhaas, the new home of the Dallas Theater Center is thereby transformed into one large fly tower that provides an infinite variety of stage configurations, and liberates the performance chamber's perimeter to allow fantasy and reality to mix when and where desired. The Wyly Theatre's design was begun in 2004 by OMA New York, a firm owned equally by Prince-Ramus and Koolhaas. In 2006, Prince-Ramus bought Koolhaas out of the company and renamed the existing entity REX.

Prince-Ramus, who gave a lecture in the Wyly Theatre on Friday, comments, "The Wyly is a 'theater machine' that grants freedom to determine the entire artistic experience, from audience arrival to performance configuration to departure."

The Dallas Theater Center's previous accommodation, a makeshift residence located in a galvanized metal shed, liberated its users from the limitations imposed by a fixed-stage configuration and the need to avoid harming expensive interior finishes. The Wyly Theatre's unprecedented "stacked" design meets two distinct challenges -- it retains and refines the same freedoms that made the DTC's original building a successful theater space and creates a new theatrical structure that combines flexibility with affordability.

The theater can be altered into a wide array of configurations -- including proscenium, thrust and flat floor -- empowering directors and scenic designers to choose the stage-audience configuration that fulfills their artistic desires, or to invent one of their own. Directors can incorporate the Dallas skyline and streetscape into performances at will, as the auditorium is enclosed by an acoustic glass facade with optional black-out blinds and panels that can be opened to allow patrons or performers to enter the auditorium directly from outside. The performance chamber is intentionally made of materials that are not precious to encourage alterations; the stage and auditorium surfaces can be cut, drilled, painted, welded, sawed, nailed, glued, and stitched at limited cost.

On a Friday night, patrons can share Lear's sorrow in a dark and quiet theater. Then Saturday evening, against the dramatic backdrop of the Dallas cityscape, the audience can join Vladimir and Estragon in their vigil for Godot, in an auditorium now stripped of its comforting cocoon.

Source: REX



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alexander troup, says:

Pay toilets and toilet paper too...A/T...Tenor voice machine... out of order.....

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1 month, 2 weeks ago
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jtmbls, says:

Just curious, did you have to edit out about ten pages of the "About Rex" section?

Any coverage of the Winspear Opera House coming soon?

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1 month, 2 weeks ago
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alexander troup, says:

No coverage Monkey Bean, Oprah is in town and more important then the Winspear Viking Hut...A/T, Once member of the Dallas Opera for 8 years in stage and other, for real........

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1 month, 2 weeks ago
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nance, says:

Alex, are you still at it with the urban archeology?

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1 month, 2 weeks ago
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alexander troup, says:

Well, Dallas is such a new city now, it really is a future of what Contemporary Culture has to be in 2009, while the new people of Dallas don't understand where Contemporary Culture comes from, so why all this stuff about history culture and refinement..., or the Birth of a Nation and even the birth of an Arts District...

I began my Arts District dig's in the early 1970's where the present freeway is....And by the 1980's I was in the first section, then block by block decade after decade, I came to realize ...After having been to many other cities, their Arts Districts and a vision statement place they want to be in.....Flora street, Ross and Maple are missing something... And what could that be....

While in 2007 I did recover from an old french residence that is where the Opera Hall is today Circa 1870s, much intresting artifacts of such an era and place,.....While does anyone care...

And so the moral of my excavations and realizations, does Dallas care...I do...A/T, It is up to you to dig for the meaning of life, pleasure or Cultural Heritage,and share.....

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