The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Aurora Theatre's larger venue near completion

CARES Act funds help expand outdoor area, add health measures.

- By Amanda C. Coyne amanda. coyne@ ajc. com

Aurora Theatre could start holding in- person performanc­es again as soon as this spring.

It will look a little different, of course, not only because of the pandemic, but also because of its newly expanded downtown Lawrencevi­lle performanc­e space.

The Lawrencevi­lle Performing Arts Center broke ground in June 2019, and the $ 35 million expansion project i s expected to be complete by mid- May. Once fifinished, the performing arts center will have at least 650 additional seats: 500 in the largest theater, with tiered seating and an orchestra pit, and about 150 in a smaller cabaret theater.

An outdoor performanc­e space will not have permanent seating but can accommodat­e at least 200 people, co- founder Anthony Rodriguez said. The existing theater seats 250 people in the former First United Methodist Church, which has been Aurora Theatre’s home since 2004.

The Arts Center will be a complex including the existing Aurora Theatre, the building currently under constructi­on and an “art

alley” with a large courtyard that can double as an outdoor performanc­e space.

An outdoor courtyard was always in the plans, but CARES Act funds obtained through the city of Lawrence ville allowed it to become a full-fledged performanc­e space, including a fabric draped ceiling and stage lighting, Rodriguez said. It will be able to seat about 200 people in a socially distanced manner and could open as soon as late April, senior project manager Mike Sims said.

More than $ 2 million in CARES Act funding helped expand t he outdoor area and add other health and safety measures inside the Arts Center expansion and the existing Aurora Theatre. Once constructi­on is complete, there will be state- ofthe art filters in the ventilatio­n system, touchless bathroom fixtures and plexiglass barriers at ticket counters.

“We didn’t ask for any of it. That was all ( Cit y Manager) Chuck Warbington and Mayor David Still. The city came through,” Rodriguez said. “These were things we would love, but we knew it wasn’t in the( original) budget.”

In addition to the two new theaters and the outdoor performanc­e space, the Performing Arts Center will have multiple classrooms, dressing rooms and a rehearsal room as large as their largest stage. Currently, Aurora Theatre’s largest formal rehearsal space isn’t big enough to rehearse large dance numbers, co- founder Ann- Carol Pence said.

“Right now, we rehearse in the lobby,” Pence said. “It’s the only place that can hold more than 20 people.”

Rodriguez, Pence and leaders from the city of Lawrencevi­lle celebrated the facility’ s“topping out ”— marking the completion of structural work — last week. The city is paying for the project upfront. The Aurora Theatre will pay back more than $ 5 million of the cost over time and manage the venue.

It’s unclear when indoor performanc­es will resume, as large groups of people singing or speaking indoors are considered risky for the potential to spread coronaviru­s. In the more immediate future, Aurora Theatre will continue streaming some performanc­e sand hosting others at large outdoor venues like the Gwinnett County Fairground­s, Pence said.

Since the pandemic emerged in Georgia, the Aurora Theatre has been offering streaming performanc­es for a fee and hosting outdoor events including comedy nights. Its first indoor performanc­es since March will be in December, with Rodriguez’s one- man version of “A Christmas Carol” performed to a masked, socially distant crowd.

When it is safe to return to indoor theaters, Pence sees Aurora Theatre as a place where new production­s can be workshoppe­d in preparatio­n for an opening on Broadway.

Aurora regularly puts on Broadway hits new and old, f rom “Les Miserables” to “Mamma Mia.” She cited Atlanta’s Alliance Theatre, which has workshoppe­d Broadway hits like “Sister Act” and “The Color Purple” before their New York premieres, and the play “Driving Miss Daisy,” set in Atlanta and written by Atlanta native Alfred Uhry, though it premiered in New York.

“Those are the stories we want to tell as Southern visionarie­s. It’s different than a story from New York that comes here,” Pence said. “That shepherds in an Atlanta story with an Atlanta connection. We can develop new work in a way that will help them shepherd those pieces to New York.”

 ??  ?? Aurora Theatre co- founders Ann- Carol Pence ( left) and Anthony Rodriguez tour the Lawrencevi­lle Performing Arts Center constructi­on site Tuesday. They and city leaders celebrated the facility’s “topping out” — marking the completion of structural work — last week.
Aurora Theatre co- founders Ann- Carol Pence ( left) and Anthony Rodriguez tour the Lawrencevi­lle Performing Arts Center constructi­on site Tuesday. They and city leaders celebrated the facility’s “topping out” — marking the completion of structural work — last week.
 ?? PHOTOS BY ALYSSA POINTER/ ALYSSA. POINTER@ AJC. COM ?? Constructi­on continues Tuesday in downtown Lawrencevi­lle on the expansion of the Aurora Theatre’s space in Lawrencevi­lle Performing Arts Center, seen in an aerial view from a catwalk.
PHOTOS BY ALYSSA POINTER/ ALYSSA. POINTER@ AJC. COM Constructi­on continues Tuesday in downtown Lawrencevi­lle on the expansion of the Aurora Theatre’s space in Lawrencevi­lle Performing Arts Center, seen in an aerial view from a catwalk.
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/ ALYSSA. POINTER@ AJC. COM ?? A view from the stage out toward audience seating Tuesday shows progress on constructi­on of the expansion of the Aurora Theatre’s space in downtown Lawrencevi­lle.
ALYSSA POINTER/ ALYSSA. POINTER@ AJC. COM A view from the stage out toward audience seating Tuesday shows progress on constructi­on of the expansion of the Aurora Theatre’s space in downtown Lawrencevi­lle.

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