![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Now known as Goodspeed Musicals, the old opera house has won a couple of special Tony Awards along the way, for its remarkable achievements in regional theater. Despite years of neglect and disrepair, the theater was renovated and revitalized in the 1960s and has maintained a loyal following ever since, even seeing the world premieres of some major Broadway productions including Man of La Mancha, Shenandoah, and Annie. Putting the theater up top allowed for the patrons to be ushered up a grand central staircase, but impressive as the entry was (and still is), the quirky design forced stagehands to maneuver props and scenery up to the stage floor by means of an empty elevator shaft - a tricky maneuver at the very least.Īfter William Goodspeed died in 1882 the theater was nearly abandoned, and through the first half of the 20th century it was used mostly for storage. Something of an oddity of design, the theater itself was installed on the upper floors, the lower levels housing a riverboat terminal, some offices and a general store. It was built in 1877 by William Goodspeed, a wealthy local banker and merchant, and rather than a stately home he created a theater for local productions (despite its name, none of which had anything to do with opera). In East Haddam, on the banks of the Connecticut River, sits a grand Victorian building that could easily be mistaken for a 19th century Robber Baron’s mansion. But some of Broadway’s most popular and successful shows were born in a less than likely place - a bucolic corner of southeastern Connecticut. Dreams of musical theater usually go hand-in-glove with the glitz and glamor of Broadway - the bright lights, the larger-than-life Times Square billboards, the big city buzz.
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