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Chicago Shakespeare Theater

Company's Pier Complex Adds Third Theater

Chicago Shakespeare Theater on Navy PierThe Chicago Shakespeare Theater on Navy Pier is expanding its complex by adding a new theater called The Yard, which the company plans to have ready for its 2017-2018 season.

The project was announced in a press conference that included Chicago Shakespeare Artistic Director Barbara Gaines, Executive Director Criss Henderson, and Board Chair Sheli Z. Rosenberg along with Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, Navy Pier, Inc. CEO Marilynn Gardner and the Pier's Board Chair William J. Brodsky. Construction begins this spring on what the company is calling "an innovative performance venue."

The vision for the new theater focuses on resourceful, sustainable, and adaptive design. At a cost of $35 million, the project repurposes components of the venue formerly known as Skyline Stage, located adjacent to Chicago Shakespeare. The Yard is connected to the existing facility, which currently houses two theaters, through expanded lobbies. The year-round venue can be configured in a variety of shapes and sizes with audience capacities ranging from 150 to 850, defining the audience-artist relationship to best serve each production.

The Yard at Chicago Shakespeare is integral to Navy Pier's Centennial Vision, a reimagining of the Midwest's most visited leisure destination celebrating its 100th anniversary this year. The new and renovated features are designed to expand Navy Pier's impact and audience, showcasing a vibrant cultural, environmental, educational and recreational landscape. Building on the Theater's 16-year partnership in residence on Navy Pier, The Yard will be funded through a $15 million investment by Navy Pier, Inc. along with $20 million in capital funding raised through Chicago Shakespeare's Our City, Our Shakespeare Campaign.

To realize Chicago Shakespeare's plan for what a next-generation performance venue should be, the Theater has enlisted the services of Chicago-based Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture and the United Kingdom-based theater and acoustics consultancy firm Charcoalblue, whose recent pioneering projects include venues for the Royal Shakespeare Company, National Theatre of Great Britain, and the newly opened St. Ann's Warehouse in Brooklyn, New York. Together, the two firms have designed a space that is "forward-thinking, surprising, raw, and provocative, reflective of the dynamic work of Chicago Shakespeare's multifaceted artistic vision and the variety of audiences engaged across the Theater's programming," says a Chicago Shakespeare statement.

The design repurposes the existing Skyline Stage by constructing a fully enclosed, indoor theater chamber beneath the landmark white dome, utilizing the existing stagehouse and backstage support spaces. A movable set of structural audience "towers" creates a radically new performance arena, which can be reimagined and adapted to the widest range of artistic visions by designers and directors from an intimate theater in the round to an 850-seat proscenium house. Each mobile tower—the size of a city bus stood on its end—contains three levels of seating. These structures, pioneered for this design, house extensive theatrical technology and connect into a network of HVAC components and sprinkler systems to accommodate audience comfort and safety. The iconic white tent becomes a canvas for projection and lighting design that will animate the exterior shell of the facility.

"Creating this state-of-the-art performance venue is another step in the redevelopment of Navy Pier to ensure that it remains one of Chicago's premier centers for commerce but also for culture, and I want to thank Chicago Shakespeare for their tremendous contribution to that effort," Mayor Emanuel said in a statement. "There is no better time to announce this new performance space than in the year when we will bring local and international artists together for Shakespeare 400 Chicago, which will keep the spirit of Shakespeare alive in our schools and on our stages. I look forward to watching The Yard at Chicago Shakespeare become one of Chicago's next great cultural jewels for years to come."

The Yard will be Chicago Shakespeare's third stage and, together with the two existing performances spaces, positions the Theater to amplify its artistic vision and community impact, expanding audiences and its service to Chicago schools through its nationally recognized arts-in-education programs. Chicago Shakespeare is an internationally award-winning theater annually producing as many as 650 performances of 19 productions, including Shakespeare's plays, new works and musicals, productions for young audiences, extensive education programs, and productions from internationally renowned artists.

"We've long needed a third theater, but we knew that a fixed theatrical space would not serve next-generation theater makers or the artistic ambition of our company," Gaines said in a statement. "The Yard will offer a new kind of venue, one that allows us the freedom to reconfigure and recalibrate a playing space each time we approach it. The Yard has been designed as a fun, responsive theater that will adapt to artistic impulses. It offers the volume for us to dream bigger, engaging future audiences in surprising and provocative ways."

Diagrams of the different modular seating tower options"The Yard demonstrates that a creative, yet economical approach can revitalize an existing facility and transform it into a world-class resource for education and entertainment," Henderson said in a statement. "By adding The Yard, Chicago Shakespeare's home will feature three diverse theatrical platforms: an Elizabethan-style courtyard theater; an intimate studio theater; and a flexible 'state of the imagination' theatrical venue. Thanks to our partnership with Navy Pier and the generosity of a community of donors, this expanded campus will allow us to foster the work of the leading theater artists of our time; produce and present theater that breaks traditional boundaries of expression; extend popular productions; and double our service to students and teachers."

The development of The Yard at Chicago Shakespeare marks a significant milestone in James Corner Field Operation's Pierscape redesign project as part of Navy Pier's Centennial celebration. The multiyear effort, which began in fall 2013, is transforming the Pier's 50 acres of premier urban waterfront location along the edge of Lake Michigan and downtown Chicago. The project seeks to enhance the experience for current guests while drawing new audiences with evening and year-round entertainment and cultural attractions. Also, through the generous legacy gift from the Polk family, legendary Chicago retailers and longstanding benefactors to Chicago and its neighborhoods, Navy Pier is reimagining its arts and discovery programming, as well as its 13-acre entrance, now known as Polk Bros Park, with new multi-stage performance lawns, public fountain, and expansive promenade.

Navy Pier's Centennial Celebration will kick off with the opening of the new Ferris wheel on May 27, followed by the unveiling of the Polk Bros Fountain and Plaza, the Louis Vuitton America's Cup World Series Chicago June 10–12, the annual Fourth of July celebration, Tall Ships Chicago July 27–31, and the opening of The Yard at Chicago Shakespeare in Fall 2017.

"Chicago Shakespeare and Navy Pier have had a visionary partnership since the forward-thinking decision to bring the Theater to our venerable civic space in 1999," Gardner said in her statement. "With the Theater's proven track record for serving the community and creating award-winning performances, we are confident that this investment will lead to a successful second act. This expansion, new dining options and the completion of the Pierscape plan will not only enhance the theater-going experience for guests, it will continue to elevate Navy Pier as a major cultural destination and growing draw for worldwide visitors to Chicago."

Chicago Shakespeare has secured $40.4 million of the $55 million initiative that will provide $20 million for the construction of The Yard at Chicago Shakespeare; $15 million for theatrical equipment, including The Yard's "towers;" and $20 million for artistic and endowment funds supporting Chicago Shakespeare's artistic, educational and international programming. The campaign has received 14 gifts over $1 million, with the lead individual gift pledged by Carl and Marilynn Thoma to establish the Carl and Marilynn Thoma Artistic Director Chair, held by the Theater's founder Barbara Gaines.

March 3, 2016

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