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   » » Wiki: Stadsschouwburg
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The Stadsschouwburg (; Dutch: Municipal Theatre) of Amsterdam is a on the in , . The building was built in 1894 in the style, and was the home of the National Ballet and Opera.

(2025). 9781848368828, Penguin.


History

Rederijkerskamers
The first 'rederijkers' (Dutch orators) appeared at the end of the 15th century in Amsterdam. In the 16th century, these so-called precursors of modern theatre organized themselves into 'rederijkerskamers', which can be compared to theater companies. At that time, there were no permanent theater buildings in Amsterdam, and the shipping company cherries performed on temporary stages, from carts (during processions) or in public spaces. Rederijkerskamers that performed in Amsterdam were: "In Liefde Bloeyende" and "'t Wit Lavendel". The latter was also known as the "Brabantsche Kamer", since its members mainly hailed from Brabant and the Flemish areas.


Duytsche Academie
In 1617, the dramatists Samuel Coster and Gerbrand Adriaenszoon Bredero - along with their Rederijkerskamer "In Liefde Bloeyende" - founded the . This institution was formed after the example of Italian academies, to popularize science through lectures in the national language. The Academy was established in a wooden building at in Amsterdam, on the site of the modern hotel Blakes.


First Schouwburg of Van Campen
The Schouwburg of Van Campen was a theatre located at 384 in Amsterdam, Amsterdam's first city theatre. The site is now occupied by a hotel.


New Theater
In 1664 it was decided that the small theater of Van Campen had to be replaced by a larger theater building more in tune with the customs and Baroque architecture of the time. This new theater was twice as large as the old, and opened on 26 May 1665.
(1993). 9780521233835, Cambridge University Press. .
Its first stone had been laid by the youngest daughter of the playwright Jan Vos.

The Amsterdam story writer gives an ample description of this building, mentioning in particular the theatre machinery, through which men could fall through the air or disappear below the stage. Gerard de Lairesse helped decorate the interior.Evenhuis, R.B. Ook dat was Amsterdam, deel III. De kerk der hervorming in de tweede helft van de zeventiende eeuw: nabloei en inzinking, p. 39.

This building was regularly extended and adapted but on 7 May 1772, the building caught fire during a performance, after a theatre servant gone had carelessly gone round the building with a naked candle from the stage lighting. The fire quickly burnt itself out, yet killed 18 people, destroyed 22 houses in the surroundings, and was so large that he it could be seen all the way from , Utrecht and on the island of . The rubble became valuable due to the gold and the jewels in it, and the site was sold by its owners after the fire.


Leidseplein
The city theatre moved to the Leidseplein and opened on 13 September 1789 with the première of Lucretia Wilhelmina van Merken's tragedy Jacob Simonszoon de Ryk. The building had a wooden structure behind a stone facade. It burned down in 1890.

The present theatre was built between 1892 and 1894 to a design of (1850–1915), with the cooperation of his father J. B. Springer and Adolf Leonard van Gendt. The rebuilding was supported by the prominent banker, philanthropist and senator A.C. Wertheim. In 1982 it became a . From the end Second World War until the opening of the in 1986, the Dutch National Opera was based in the Stadsschouwburg.


Culture and theatre
Whenever has a major win, they often go to the steps of the cities theater to be publicly applauded. The normal programme of events encompasses all sorts of theatrical forms, mostly by Dutch writers.

The Boekenbal ( book ball) is traditionally held in the Stadsschouwburg and it marks the beginning of the annual ( book week).


Notes


Bibliography
  • Worp, J.A.: Geschiedenis van den Amsterdamschen Schouwburg 1496-1772. Amsterdam: S.L. van Looy, 1920.


See also


External links

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