| A River Runs Through It
One Irishman’s Dream Becomes Another’s Reality.
By Turlough
McConnell
Joe Dowling stands in the amber glass ninth-floor lobby of the Dowling
Studio in the gleaming new Guthrie Theater in downtown Minneapolis. Outside
the mighty Mississippi runs alongside the cobalt building designed by
the French architect Jean Nouvel.
This architectural marvel, which cost $125 million, is instantly impressive,
its deep-blue exterior constructed of steel and glass and adorned with
giant sized etched portraits of Irish and American theater giants, the
theater’s namesake Sir Tyrone Guthrie, Eugene O’Neill, George
Bernard Shaw, Tennessee Williams and Langston Hughes. The view encompasses
the Mississippi River, the old Minneapolis milling district and the city
skyline to the east. The striking lobby that flows upwards on several
levels is equally compelling with images from the theater’s 43-year
history.
“Since its founding in 1963,” says Dowling, artistic director
since 1995, “the Guthrie has been embraced as a vital cultural and
social resource by the people of Minnesota. The founders recognized that
the Midwest had an appetite for great drama professionally produced and
the will to support it through good times and bad.” Forty–three
years later, the Guthrie remains the heart of Minnesota’s cultural
life and a beacon of the best there is in American theater. The Guthrie
is one of the nation’s oldest and most respected centers for theatrical
performance, production, education and professional training, and presents
both classical literature and new work from diverse cultures. “Sir
Tyrone Guthrie’s vision significantly influenced the development
of American theater in the second half of the 20th century,” says
Dowling. “The new Guthrie Theater has the opportunity to play a
major role in American theater in the 21st century.”
Dublin-born Dowling, 58, would be a noteworthy theatrical figure anywhere
but he is at home in Minneapolis. “The Guthrie gave birth to the
American resident theater movement, which now stretches from sea to shining
sea in theaters all around the country,” says Dowling. “But
until now it lacked a center. With the new Guthrie we now have a national
center of theater art and theater education.”
The Guthrie is
a 285,000-square-foot facility that houses three theaters: The Wurtele
Thrust Stage, seating 1,100; the McGuire Proscenium Stage, a 700-seat
theater; and the black-box Dowling Studio, with flexible seating. A tour
of the Guthrie’s nine stories reveals both the grand scale and meticulous
attention to detail in Nouvel’s design, which was inspired in part
by the mills surrounding the location. Nouvel believed that, in order
to be fully appreciated, the main public gathering spaces must be high
above ground level to fully capture the views.
The design of the building is noteworthy by any standard. One acclaimed
feature is an “endless bridge”: a cantilever that extends
outward over the Mississippi. This makes a stunning sight especially at
twilight when the blue metal exterior blends into the night sky. Inside,
screen-printed images of past productions and actors of the old Guthrie
line the public spaces. These faint images of old Guthrie productions
are both ghosts of the old and guardians of the new. Here, under Dowling’s
inspired leadership, is theater as theme park.
The original Guthrie Theater sprang from Tyrone Guthrie’s desire
for a new kind of theater that would encourage the production of great
works of literature and attract actors seeking a break from the commercialism
of Broadway. The Guthrie Theater opened its doors on May 7, 1963, with
a production of Hamlet directed by Tyrone Guthrie himself. It is fitting
that the Guthrie Theater moved to its new complex after a 2006 production
of Hamlet. The first production at the new location, The Great Gatsby,
opened on July 15, 2006, a nod to native St. Paul son F. Scott Fittzgerald.
Tyrone Guthrie was born in Annaghmakerrig in County Monaghan, where
there is also a long-time cultural center (see sidebar.) He was director
of the Scottish National Players during the 1920s and directed the Festival
Theatre in Cambridge, England. During the mid 1950s, Guthrie was the artistic
director and co-founder of the Shakespearean Festival in Stratford, Ontario.
In 1959 Guthrie published a small invitation in the drama page of The
New York Times soliciting community interest and involvement in a resident
theater. Of the seven cities that responded, the Twin Cities showed the
most enthusiasm for the project. Guthrie wrote that it was the Mississippi
River that led him to choose Minneapolis over six other locations. “‘Eventually,
the Twin Cities will realize that their river is a wonderful and life-giving
amenity,’” Dowling quotes Guthrie. “‘It has taken
2000 years even to begin to appreciate this about the Thames. Perhaps
it is not unreasonable to expect that the Twin Cities will take a mere
hundred.’”
During its first
season, the Guthrie Theater featured the well-known stage actors Jessica
Tandy and Zoe Caldwell. Tyrone Guthrie served as artistic director until
1966 and continued to direct at the theater until 1969, two years before
his death. In 1994, after an international search, Joe Dowling was named
the Guthrie’s seventh artistic director. Dowling came to the Guthrie
from Ireland’s Abbey Theatre, where he was the youngest artistic
director in the theater’s long history. Dowling continued the Guthrie’s
commitment to repertory theater and presided over a return to national
touring. Under Dowling, the number of subscribers reached a new high of
32,000, and his 2006 production of Hamlet set record attendance.
“Overall, we’re still feeling like we’re settling in,”
says Joe Dowling. “But it’s time for the hard work to begin.”
He also acknowledges the suddenly grander scale on which his already big-budget
regional theater is operating. “Our challenges include moving from
one and a half theaters to a three-theater organization,” Dowling
says. “The shift requires us to think more long-term, in our relationships
with writers and designers, as well as considering how to diversify and
expand our audience.”
The local reaction to the Guthrie’s 2006-07 season was at first
one of skepticism. In addition to Gatsby, programming included The Merchant
of Venice and Neil Simon’s Lost in Yonkers. Plays on the McGuire
proscenium stage included works by Tom Stoppard, Alfred Uhry, Tennessee
Williams and George Bernard Shaw. The proscenium stage opened in June
with the North American premiere of Ireland’s Druid Theater Company’s
DruidSynge, prior to its Lincoln Center Festival run.
Dowling defends his selections on the grounds of artistic vitality and
their contribution to the American cultural dialogue. “I think there’s
inevitability in the argument that in a new theater people ought to do
fancy new things,” Dowling says. “But our mission is unchanged.
We moved in order to have better facilities. It would be foolish to ask
an audience to move location and to also develop a taste for different
theater.”
Nicolai Ouroussoff, writing in The New York Times, comments that, “the
true heart of the new building is its connective tissue, such as the two-tier
public foyer where theatergoers mingle during the intermission.”
Dowling is a master of connecting art and community. The Twin Cities of
Minneapolis and St. Paul are undergoing an economic and social transformation.
Ouroussoff notes, “The city too is a theater, a vast unstable laboratory
that is constantly being reshaped by economic, political and imaginative
forces.” Dowling knows well that his theater, like the Mississippi
River, must challenge and connect people by promoting a national cultural
awareness. That is the mission of this great new American theater as the
curtain rises for a much anticipated second act.
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