Meiji-za (Keijō)

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Meiji-za
明治座
The building in 1937
Map
Alternative namesMyeongdong Theater (successor)
General information
Town or cityKeijō (Seoul)
CountryKorea, Empire of Japan
Coordinates37°33′50″N 126°59′03″E / 37.5638°N 126.9843°E / 37.5638; 126.9843
Named forEmperor Meiji
OpenedOctober 7, 1936 (1936-10-07)
Closed1945 (1945)
Technical details
Floor count4
Other information
Seating capacity1,100

Meiji-za (Japanese: 明治座, Korean명치좌; RRMyeongchi-jwa) was a theater in Keijō (Seoul), Korea, Empire of Japan. It opened on October 7, 1936, and was located in Myeong-dong.[1] Upon the liberation of Korea in 1945, the theater became owned by Koreans. It was renamed a number of times until it closed in 1973 and was used as an office building. It reopened in 2009 as Myeongdong Theater [ko], which still operates today.

History[edit]

The theater was named for the Japanese Emperor Meiji. It had one underground floor and four above-ground floors that could seat 1,100 people. It mainly catered to Japanese settlers in Korea, and showed mainly Japanese-language productions. The building's design was inspired by that of famous theater in Japan Taishokwan [ja].[2]

After the liberation of Korea in 1945, the theater was renamed in January 1946 to International Theater (Korean국제극장; RRGukje Geukjang). It was renamed again on December 1947 to Shigonggwan (시공관), and began screening movies.[1] On June 1, 1957, it was renamed to Myeongdong Arts Center (명동예술회관), and in 1962 it was again renamed to Myeongdong National Theater (명동국립극장).[1] It closed in 1973, as a new national theater opened at Namsan Mountain. The building was sold to a financial company and used as an office.[2] The building was in danger of being demolished for a long period of time after that, but a movement arose in the performing arts community to preserve it. As part of these efforts, the building was purchased by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism in 2009,[2] and it reopened as Myeongdong Theater on June 5, 2009.[1][3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d "명동예술극장". www.kmdb.or.kr (in Korean). Retrieved 2024-03-11.
  2. ^ a b c 정, 치영 (2023-11-09). "[반세기, 기록의 기억] (96) 명동예술극장". 경향신문 (in Korean). Retrieved 2024-03-12.
  3. ^ "Myeongdong Theater (명동예술극장)". VisitKorea. Korea Tourism Organization. Retrieved 2024-03-11.

External links[edit]