The new theatre area on West 18th Street in Chelsea. (Photo by Lucille Lortel Theatre.)
NEW YORK CITY: The Lucille Lortel Theatre has introduced the acquisition of a three-story carriage home on West 18th Street in Manhattan. The constructing, which features a 61-seat studio theatre, will function the group’s new headquarters.
“We are excited to be able to continue Lucille Lortel’s legacy of supporting New York City artists and theatre lovers by expanding our physical presence and programming,” government director George Forbes stated in an announcement. “This new space expands on Lucille Lortel Theatre’s mission to foster both new and established artists, increase awareness and appreciation of Off-Broadway, and create a larger, more diverse community of theatremakers and audiences.”
The new theatre will home a public cooperative working area for artists and workplace area, along with the studio theatre. Lucille Lortel Theatre anticipates that the area will open in 2025. The $3.5 million buy of the area, which was secured by Denham Wolf Real Estate Services, expands Lucille Lortel’s actual property holdings past their not too long ago renovated Christopher Street theatre.
“An arts organization’s real estate portfolio can be a powerful tool in increasing their influence on the local culture,” Paul Wolf, co-founder and president of Denham Wolf, stated in an announcement. “We’re proud to have guided the Lucille Lortel Theatre through their purchase of a new, multi-functional space that will diversify their portfolio and solidify their position as a bulwark for Off-Broadway theatre.”
The acquisition announcement comes after the impartial movie studio A24 bought the Cherry Lane Theatre within the West Village final week for $10 million. An government at A24 informed The New York Times that the studio will current theatre and comedy exhibits at Cherry Lane, along with movie screenings, and that the corporate doesn’t but know if it should develop new theatre works at Cherry Lane or current works developed elsewhere. Cherry Lane’s former proprietor, Angelina Fiordellisi, had initially agreed to promote the theatre to the Lucille Lortel Theater in 2021 for $11 million, however the deal fell by.
Prior to the announcement of the carriage home acquisition, the Lucille Lortel Theatre named playwright Caridad Svich and author and director Michael Heitzman the theatre’s new co-artistic administrators of recent work.
The Lucille Lortel Theatre’s mission is to foster each new and established artists, enhance consciousness and appreciation of Off-Broadway theatre, and uphold truthful and equitable enterprise and inventive practices to serve a various group of theatremakers and audiences. Its applications embrace the NYC Public High School Playwriting Fellowship, Immigrant Experiences on the New School, the Lucille Lortel Awards, and the Internet Off-Broadway Database, amongst others.