Denver Performing Arts Complex
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
Images
Denver Performing Arts Complex [DPAC] (image from Jamie Cotten, The Denver Post)
DPAC's Sculpture Garden (image from DPAC)
Entrance to the Ellie Caulkins Opera House (image from DPAC)
The "Ellie" lobby (image from DPAC)
The "Ellie" auditorium (image from DPAC)
Boettcher Concert Hall (image from DPAC)
Lobby of the Temple Hoyne Buell Theatre (image from DPAC)
The Wolf Room in the Temple Hoyne Buell (image from DPAC)
Backstory and Context
Text-to-speech Audio
History of the Complex
In the 1950s, Helen G. Bonfils, co-owner of the Denver Post newspaper, was one of the city's leading philanthropists, as well as an occasional actress. She built the Bonfils Theatre on Colfax Avenue as a community theatre, performing there with her friends, then partnered with Wall Street lawyer and Broadway producer Donald R. Seawell to bring a professional acting company to Denver in the 1960s. Seawell brought Tyrone Guthrie of Minneapolis to Denver for the creation and direction of the company, but a series of disasters prevented progress. Guthrie died suddenly, Helen Bonfils' health declined to the point that she was permanently hospitalized, and Bonfils and Seawell struggled in a legal battle for the ownership of the Post. The legal battle was won, but Bonfils died, leaving Seawell in charge of the paper in 1972 [1].
Seawell created the Bonfils Foundation using stock from the
newspaper and, in the same day, changed the charter of the Bonfils Theatre into
the Denver Center for the Performing Arts, gotten agreement from the City of
Denver for his plans, and hired Kevin Roche as the architect for the project
[1]. Construction on the performing arts complex began two years later, in
1974, with the Berlin Philharmonie inspired Boettcher Concert Hall (opened in
1978) as its centerpiece. The historic Auditorium Theatre (now the Quigg Newton
Denver Municipal Auditorium and Ellie Caulkins Opera House) and the
multi-theatre Helen Bonfils Theatre Complex were also within Seawell's original
complex [2]. Only a year later, two cabaret spaces were added, touring Broadway
shows came to the complex, and Denver's repertory company under Edward Payson
Call had begun performing in the Bonfils Complex. During the 1980s, the three-year
Master of Fine Arts Acting school, the National Theatre Conservatory, was
established, new plays were developed by the Theatre Company, and the company
was nominated for its first Tony Award. In 1991, the former Auditorium sports
arena was remodeled into the Temple Hoyne Buell Theatre to better accommodate touring
Broadway productions [1]. Also in the 1990s, the DCPA began offering community
acting courses, established the Colorado Performing Arts Hall of Fame, and
opened its special event venue, the Seawell Grand Ballroom [1; 2]. In the
following decade, the complex began hosting Disney Theatricals, established the
Colorado New Play Summit, and received an Innovation Lab for the Performing
Arts Grant. Donald Seawell retired in 2007, and passed away in 2015 [1].
Today, in addition to performances, the complex offers
school programs, acting classes for all ages, workshops, study guides, distance
learning, cast interactions, and competitions in playwriting and musical
theatre, and hosts field trips, career days, Kids Night on Broadway and Family
Day events, the Family Forum, backstage tours, and the Women with Hattitude
Luncheon [1].