La Perla | |
![]() Teatro La Perla | |
![]() | |
Address | Calle Mayor and Calle Cristina (NE corner) |
---|---|
Location | Ponce, Puerto Rico |
Coordinates | 18°00′44″N66°36′42″W / 18.012139°N 66.611757°W Coordinates: 18°00′44″N66°36′42″W / 18.012139°N 66.611757°W |
Owner | Autonomous Municipality of Ponce |
Operator | Carmen Martinez Aja, director [1] |
Type | Indoor theater |
Genre(s) | music, concerts, theatre |
Seating type | soft seat, reserved seating |
Capacity | 1,047 |
Construction | |
Broke ground | 1860 |
Built | 1860-1864 |
Opened | 28 May 1864 [2] |
Closed | 1918-1941 (earthquake) 2006-2008 (renovations) |
Reopened | 2008 |
Architect | Juan Bertoli Calderoni |
Tenants | |
Festival Luis Torres Nadal | |
La Perla Auditorium and Public Library | |
NRHP reference No. | 100007054 |
Added to NRHP | 27 September 2021 |
Teatro La Perla is a historic theater in the city of Ponce, Puerto Rico. Inaugurated in 1864, [3] it is the second oldest theater of its kind in Puerto Rico, [4] but "the largest and most historic in the Spanish-speaking Caribbean." [5] [6] The theater was named La Perla in honor of the Virgin of Montserrat (Spanish: La Virgen de Montserrat), known as "The Pearl of the Mediterranean." [7] [8] [9] [lower-alpha 1] It is located in barrio Tercero, in the Ponce Historic Zone.
The theater was designed in the 1860s by Juan Bertoli Calderoni (a Ponceño of Italian heritage resident of the city) and it bears a neoclassical structure with an impressive six-column entrance. The building was badly damaged by the 1918 earthquake. However, it was rebuilt in 1940 using the original plans and reopened in 1941 with better acoustics technology. It closed in 2006 for renovations and reopened on 14 March 2008. [10]
Teatro La Perla was built under the initiative of Francisco Parra Duperón and Pedro Garriga in May 1864. [11] It was inaugurated on 28 May 1864 with the play La campana de la Almudaina of the Majorcan writer Juan Palou y Coll by the theatrical company of Segarra & Argente. [12]
Teatro La Perla served as a stage not only to give life to the theatrical artistic culture in the region, but it also served as a place of assembly for those who were dedicated to the social issues in Ponce and in Puerto Rico as a whole. It served this function both at the end of the Spanish regime and in Puerto Rico's early years as a United States territory. [13]
In this theater, in 1901, Frenchman Eduardo Hervet showed the first silent film ever to be run in Puerto Rico. [14] The theater's first illumination technical director was Félix Juan Torres Ortiz. [15]
It was significantly rebuilt by Lorenzo J. Vizcarrondo, an engineer, "a few years before" 1913, to make up for the deterioration it had suffered over years of less-than-complete upkeep. [16] It was again reconditioned between 1977 and 1979 at a cost of over $500,000. [17] After Hurricane Maria it closed for a year, reopening on 1 November 2019. [18] It was listed on the US National Register of Historic Places on 27 September 2021 ("La Perla Auditorium and Public Library"). [19] [20]
The theater has a seating capacity of 1,047 and is now a regular venue for concerts, opera, plays, and various civic and educational activities such as school graduations. [21] The lobby of the theater has a small museum dedicated to the history of the building and past shows.
Teatro La Perla has been host to several significant events, among them:
Manuel Zeno Gandía was a Puerto Rican physician, poet, novelist, journalist and politician. He is best known as the author of La Charca, a novel considered by many to be the first Puerto Rican novel.
Salvador de Vives Rodó, also known as Salvador Vives, was a Puerto Rican hacendado and Mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico, from 1 January 1840 to 5 January 1842 and then again from 1 January 1844 to 24 November 1845. His son, Carlos Vives, was a member of the Ponce Municipal Assembly.
Eduardo Neumann Gandía, was one of Puerto Rico's most accomplished historians. He is particularly well known for his nineteenth century book Verdadera y Auténtica Historia de la Ciudad de Ponce: desde sus primitivos tiempos hasta la época contemporánea. His father was Guillermo Neumann, who was mayor of Ponce from 23 April 1851 to 30 September 1851. Eduardo Neumann Gandía's most important work was Benefactores y Hombres Notables de Puerto Rico.. Neumann wrote profusely during a period of 30 years, producing some 20 major works plus numerous articles in newspapers and periodicals.
Luis de Quixano y Font was Mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico, from 11 July 1863 to 23 June 1865.
Albergue Caritativo Tricoche or Hospital Tricoche is a historic building located on Calle Tricoche street in Ponce, Puerto Rico, in the city's historic district. It was designed by the Spanish Royal Corps of Engineers. The architecture consists of 19th-century civil architecture. When built in 1878, "it held the top spot among public building in Puerto Rico," based on its size and beauty.
Emilio J. Pasarell (1891–1974) was a Puerto Rican short story writer, novelist, essayist and historian.
Juan José Cartagena was Mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico, from April 1876 to 4 July 1879, and again from February 1881 to October 1881.
José Lloréns Echevarría was Mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico, for three days, from 8 November 1898 to 10 November 1898.
Eduardo Armstrong Toro was Mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico, from 1894 to 3 May 1895. He was the brother of Thomas Armstrong Toro, for whom a high school is named in Ponce, Puerto Rico.
Alejandro Ordóñez was Mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico, from 3 January 1816 to 31 December 1818. He was a teniente justicia mayor.
Socorro Girón was a Puerto Rican historian, writer, and scholar. She is best known for her legendary book "Ponce, el teatro La Perla y La Campana de la Almudaina: Historia de Ponce desde sus comienzos hasta la Segunda Decada del Siglo XX."
Elicio Berriz was a Spanish soldier and Mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico, from 1 January 1869 to 11 May 1870. and again from 1 January 1872 until his mayoral assignment was passed to two Ponce municipal assemblymen, Francisco Arce y Romero and Alejandro Albizu, later that year. As a Spanish Army soldier, Berriz held the rank of Artillery Colonel.
Pablo Manfredi was one of five interim mayors of Ponce, Puerto Rico, during the period of 14 February 1854 to 24 July 1854. The other four interim mayors during that six-month period were Julio Duboc, Escolástico Fuentes, José Benito Paz Falcón, and Antonio E. Molina.
José Benito Paz Falcón was one of five interim mayors of Ponce, Puerto Rico, during the period of 14 February 1854 to 24 July 1854. The other four interim mayors during that six-month period were Julio Duboc, Escolástico Fuentes, Pablo Manfredi, and Antonio E. Molina.
Francisco Romero was an interim Mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico, in 1847 and again in 1866.
José Benítez was mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico in 1800. He is best remembered for the creation of the Fuerte de San José in 1760 in Playa de Ponce. The fort was in operation until the 1890s.
Vicente de Soliveres y Miera was Mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico, from 4 April 1888 to 19 March 1889.
José de Nouvilas de Vilar was Mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico, from 3 January 1893 to 9 August 1894. He was a soldier in the Spanish military and held the rank of "General de Brigada".
Vicente Pérez Valdivieso was Mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico, from 11 May 1870 to 27 July 1871.