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Stop 8 van 13

Tulsa Performing Arts Center

On your left, look for the big, boxy, cream-and-tan building with a tall, mostly windowless face and a low black awning over glass doors labeled “Chapman Music Hall.”

This is the Tulsa Performing Arts Center-locals usually just call it the PAC-and from the outside it can feel a little like a present wrapped in very serious paper. But that’s kind of the point: the magic is on the inside. This complex holds four main theaters, plus studio and event spaces, an art gallery, and a reception hall big enough to handle opening-night crowds dressed like they’re casually pretending not to be excited.

The main event is Chapman Music Hall, a 2,365-seat house that’s hosted everything from big touring Broadway shows to major concert headliners. Over the years, names like Michael Bublé, Kelly Clarkson, Steve Martin, and Anthony Bourdain have all taken the stage here-proof that this building can pivot from symphonies to stand-up to stories about noodles without breaking a sweat. And when the PAC opened on March 19, 1977, the opening night talent was Ella Fitzgerald with the Tulsa Philharmonic. That’s not “soft launch” energy. That’s “we’re here, and we brought Ella” energy.

The PAC exists because Tulsa decided, in the early 1970s, that the old setup wasn’t cutting it anymore. The earlier hometown venue was the Tulsa Municipal Theatre-today’s Tulsa Theater-and leaders formed an advisory committee to figure out whether to restore older theaters or build something new. Meanwhile, businessman John H. Williams had been buying up a big nine-block stretch downtown for development. Plans shifted, land got reshuffled, and a key piece-between 2nd and 3rd on Cincinnati, where a vacant Hotel Tulsa sat-ended up being offered to the city for a performing arts center.

Then came the great Tulsa bargain of 1973: Williams and philanthropist Leta Chapman told residents, essentially, “You vote to pay half, we’ll raise the other half.” The bond campaign slogan was “Everyone’s Place,” which is honestly a pretty good line if you’re trying to get a whole city to agree on something. In August 1973 the vote passed with 69%, and the project was funded at about $14 million at the time-roughly around $100 million in today’s money, give or take, depending on which inflation calculator is having a mood.

The architect was Minoru Yamasaki-the same designer behind the former World Trade Center towers-so you’re looking at a building with some serious pedigree. To keep construction moving fast during a period of nasty inflation, a private corporation briefly managed the build and then handed the finished property back to the city. In the end, the total cost landed closer to $19 million then (around $135 million today). Big undertaking, big payoff.

Inside, the PAC isn’t just stages and seats-it’s also a museum of sorts. A city ordinance required that one percent of public building construction costs go toward art, so a committee assembled a collection that blends local, national, and international works, including significant Native American representation. The permanent collection totals 76 works, with artists like Barbara Hepworth and Louise Nevelson in the mix. So yes-this place is multitasking.

Beyond Chapman, there’s the 437-seat John H. Williams Theatre for more intimate performances, plus two flexible studio-style theaters: the Liddy Doenges Theatre and the Charles E. Norman Theatre. Acoustics were handled by Bolt, Beranek and Newman-the same firm trusted with places like Lincoln Center-so when a note hangs in the air, that’s not luck. That’s engineering.

When you’re ready, BOK Tower is a 4-minute walk heading northeast.

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Dit was een prima manier om Brighton te leren kennen zonder je als toerist te voelen. De vertelling had diepgang en context, maar overdreef het niet.
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