Welcome to the Firehouse!

The Firehouse Center for the Arts is a 195-seat intimate theater located on the waterfront of beautiful downtown historical Newburyport. This vibrant cultural center offers national, regional and local live performances at affordable prices. We believe the Firehouse is one of the best assets our community has to offer! 

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    Wednesday
    Oct032012

    Stagehands Needed!


    We need help...If you can lend a hand there will be a small stipend for your efforts!

    The Firehouse is DESPERATELY SEEKING A STAGE HAND (not a Stage Manager) for John Patrick Shanley's DOUBT, A PARABLE to be presented at the Firehouse October 11- 21.


    NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED!
    ON THE JOB TRAINING!
    WILL CONSIDER JOB SHARE


    Dates and times needed
    (all at Firehouse Center for the Arts, Market Square, Newburyport, MA):

    Thursday, Oct. 4  6:00 pm to 10:00 pm rehearsal (tomorrow)
    Saturday, Oct. 6  10:00 am - 4:00 pm rehearsal
    Monday, Oct. 8 6:00 pm to 10:00 pm rehearsal
    Tuesday, Oct 9, 6:00 pm to 10:00 pm tech rehearsal
    Wednesday, Oct 10, 6:00 pm to 10:00 pm dress rehearsal
    Thursday, Friday, Saturday Oct. 11, 12, 13   7:00 pm to 10:00 pm performances
    Sunday, Oct. 14,  2:00 pm to 5:00 pm performance
    Thursday, Friday, Saturday Oct. 18, 19, 20  7:00 pm to 10:00 pm performances
    Sunday, Oct. 21 2:00 pm to 5:00 pm performance plus strike beginning at 5:00pm)

    CONTACT Suzanne Bryan at 978-973-5309 if you are interested.

    Wednesday
    Sep122012

    Back to School with the Firehouse!


    Transportation Grants Available!


    September means it’s time to sharpen those pencils and get back to school.  There’s no substitute for cracking the books when it comes to learning, but the Firehouse Center for the Arts is once again offering amazing opportunities for schools to enhance their curriculum with live theater. 

    The Firehouse Center for the Arts is committed to the belief that the arts are an essential part of the learning experience because they enhance creativity and teach lessons in non-traditional ways. To encourage these benefits, the Firehouse Center brings arts attractions to Northern Essex County specifically with young audiences in mind through its School Show Series*.

    Each program in the Firehouse School Show Series is relevant to students’ lives today.  Programs like We the People are bringing American Civics lessons to life and promise to make Social Studies exciting and accessible as students have fun learning about the three branches of government, the First Amendment, presidential elections, democracy, the judicial process, and more.  What could be more current in this election year?  Utilizing a variety of musical styles relevant to today's youth, including rock, rhythm-and-blues, and hip-hop, We the People will instill American pride in audiences of all ages, and perhaps even inspire them to get involved and make a difference.

    Other programs in the series  include:  Beethoven’s Wig; A Christmas Carol, Panto; Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day; An Arabian Adventure; and The Secret Garden.

    Thanks to a recent gift from an anonymous foundation, the Firehouse is excited to now offer a limited number of transportation grants to schools who wish to attend the School Show Series. Grants will cover transportation costs up to $200 per school and are offered on a first-received, first-funded basis. Don’t let the cost of transportation keep your student s from the magic of theater and the arts.

    Application forms for the transportation grants are available online at www.firehouse.org .  For questions concerning the grants please contact Beth Falconer, Director of Development at beth@firehouse.org

    Downloadable Forms:
    *School Show Transportation Grant Information Sheet
    *School Show Transportation Grant Application


    * The School Show Series is sponsored in part by the Newburyport Five Cents Savings Bank

    Wednesday
    Aug292012

    Jump for joy and sing with Glee!

    This past week nearly forty students assembled each day in the Arakelian Theater for another Glee workshop program. Summer 2012 Glee Club represented the fourth time that the Firehouse Center has presented this program, which meshes perfectly with the stated mission of the local arts organization to foster the growth of individual artists and to stimulate the participation in the arts. Instructors Johanna Hoyt Kimball and Julie Pike Edmond teach youngsters some of the basics of breath control and give an introduction to performance techniques. At the end of the week the participants are then given an opportunity to show what they have learned during a recital performed on stage in the theater. 

    Giving children access to this type of program is what the Firehouse is all about.  An opportunity for young people to participate in the arts is just as important as offering exposure to the arts and is critical for their development.

    In a thank you note to the program's coordinator Firehouse Production Assistant Caron Nardi, Michelle Ridolfi wrote "Just a quick note to say "thank you" for creating and running such a great camp! [My daughter] Stella had a blast and was wishing it was longer.  The performance had my sister and me in tears. What a strong, confident group of kids. It was great!  Look forward to next summer!"

    Years of research show that arts education is closely linked to almost everything that we want for our children: academic achievement, social and emotional development, civic engagement, and equitable opportunity.

    The “Reinvesting in Arts Education” study released last year (2011) examined recent data from schools across five states and  found that integrating the arts with other subjects is particularly effective at raising achievement in math and reading. Numerous other studies have found that music instruction in particular helps develop the brain areas that are involved in language and reasoning.   There is also some evidence to suggest a causal link between music and spatial intelligence, the capacity for mentally generating, rotating, and transforming visual images—the type of thinking that is necessary to solve advanced mathematics problems.  In addition, music also affords the participants instant feedback – either the notes are played well and the instrument is in tune or they are not—and then provides an example of how hard work and practice can bring about desired results over the longer term.

    When the coursework culminates in a performance, music instruction also teaches our young people how to conquer fear and to take risks.  Anxiety is something that will crop up from time to time in life and small doses of it are actually good for us -- reaching beyond our comfort zone is crucial if any of us are to develop our full potential.

    But in addition to all these benefits there is also inherent joy in singing. The blending of many individual voices that run the gamut of the entire musical spectrum into a complex harmonious sound is one of mankind’s greatest accomplishments… both literally and figuratively. What a wonderful thing to teach our children.


    For more photos of Summer 2012 Glee Club visit the Firehouse Picture Gallery

    Monday
    Aug132012

    Gin: The Gin Game is Full of Aces

    Alan Huisman as Weller Martin and Carol Davenport as Fonsia Dorsey in "The Gin Game" directed by Tim Diering.Last weekend saw the curtain going up in the Arakelian Theater for DL Coburn's The Gin Game. Audience members were very pleased with the performances they saw. Director Tim Diering has another successful production to add to his resume and Firehouse audiences are the ones who benefit the most from this recent addition.  Two fine acting performances were delivered by Carol Davenport (Dover, NH) playing Fonsia Dorsey and Alan Huisman (Rye, NH) as Weller Martin.  

    As the play unfolds, the two characters discuss, argue and learn about life over endless games of cards.  As playwright Coburn says, “The card game is a metaphor for fate and how the events of life are dealt to us.  We have to play them as they come our way…We laugh with pity at the vanity of the human will… But The Gin Game is also tragic because these two people suffer from the human condition and find it very difficult to escape their natural temperaments.”

    Tickets are on sale now for next weekend's performances (Thu-Sat, August 16-18 @ 8pm and Sun, August 19 @ 3pm).  Don't miss it!  Read what last weekend's audience members are saying about The Gin Game:

     


    We went to see The Gin Game today. The acting, the set, the directing were superb. Such an engaging show! Great job!
                                                                                                        Astrid Lorentzson


    I just saw "The Gin Game". I loved it! I laughed, gasped and cried. Go...see..."The Gin Game"...
                                                                                                         Madeline Sherwood


    It was an amazing opening night! The play itself is worthwhile, and the performances, direction, set all add up to an outstanding night of theater. I'm a big Alan Huisman fan but he truly blew me away even with my high expectations. Kudos to all involved!
                                                                                                          Deirdre Girard


    Saw it last night. A really great show!
                                                                                                          Michael Kimball


    We were blown away by the acting, the directing and the setting, not to speak of the lighting. What a great evening of theater. Go!
                                                                                                          
    Terry Blanchard,
                                                                                                           Firehouse Ctr. Co-President

     


    Use this link
    to read other comments as they come in on The Gin Game's page!

    Wednesday
    Aug082012

    Thank You... You Know Who You Are

    H. Jackson Brown, Jr. once said “Opportunity dances with those already on the dance floor.”  The Firehouse Center for the Arts has had a pretty impressive dance card the last few years when it comes to theater offerings.  Since the Firehouse's inception twenty years ago the mission of the Firehouse has always been to advance the arts and humanities in the Greater Newburyport area. But demands are many and budgets are never quite enough, and so to grow a quality theater program has taken time. In the more recent past, the local arts venue has been making a concerted effort to step up the growth of Firehouse-produced theater and that effort shows in the list of theatrical events on the boards in the Arakelian Theater: Waiting For Godot, House of Gold, Boxed In, The Christina Experiment, Forbidden Newburyport, The Gin Game.

    So when an anonymous donor stepped forward last year and expressed a desire to support one specific show, the Firehouse was, needless to say, thrilled at the vote of confidence. Commenting on how the Firehouse seemed to have put forth a new-found energy and rededicated itself to quality programming, the theater angel decided to make a substantial gift to last year's production of Proof, which was already slated to be in the spring lineup. The play was staged over two weekends last March and received rave reviews on many levels:  the directing, the acting, the set design and construction, the lighting.  James Atkins has in fact been nominated for an Eastern Massachusetts Association of Community Theaters (EMACT) DASH Award (Distinguished Awards and Special Honors) for the category “Best Lighting Design (Play) for this production.

    When the Firehouse produces a show it means that the Firehouse controls the budget. The Firehouse hires the director and then collaborates with that director on choosing the cast.  Due to the ever-increasing costs of staging dramatic shows this model has always meant that only minimal sets have been possible for the local theater arts company. Another piece of the complex puzzle is that the Firehouse has always strived to keep its programming accessible to the community members it serves. The delicate balancing act of overseeing funds to provide quality programming while at the same time keeping ticket prices affordable AND ensuring the financial health of the historic theater that occupies a prominent place in our community can at times be daunting.    However, it was thanks to this particular donation for Proof that a full boxed set, something usually out of range for the Firehouse, was now possible due to the breathing room provided by the extra funds.

    It was the success of Proof that led to the recommitment by the donor – this time to John Patrick Shanley’s Doubt, A Parable. Headlining the fall calendar at the Firehouse, the drama will be directed by Suzanne Bryan and will star Caroline Gulde (Somerville) as Sister James, Kathy Isbell (Newburyport) as Sister Aloysius Beauvier, Kathy Ann Hart (Somerville) as Mrs. Muller and Damon Jesperson (Byfield) as Father Flynn.  That the donor was willing to repeat their generosity shows that the Firehouse had been a good steward of the funds bestowed them last year.  The trust in the Firehouse has not been misplaced. 

    "To have a moment when the focus is truly on the art and the creative community -- and not solely on the bottom line -- is a real luxury.  What we found from Proof, is that the resulting success and energy left everyone bolstered and ready to bring this energy to everything we touch," said Firehouse Development Director Beth Falconer as she expressed her overwhelming thanks for the generous gift.

    Indeed the contribution has buoyed the little arts center that could.  It is not news that many arts organizations have had to close their doors during the last few years because of difficult economic times.  The Firehouse Center for the Arts has, at least for the time being, come through thanks in large part by some serious belt-tightening and the hard work of a very dedicated staff, board and the local creative community.  Falconer says "...we struggle to make our beloved arts center affordable and accessible (key to our mission) and financially sound.  It is work we take seriously, because we know that the joy and shared experiences at the Firehouse help build a positive, thriving community.  [This] investment helps us on every level."

    For such generosity and commitment to the arts in our community we all say "Thank you". You know who you are...