FACILITIES
The
Performing Arts/Radio Television Center completed
in 1985, houses the office complex of the Dean of the School of Fine Arts,
the Henry Meloy Gallery, the offices of the Department of Drama/Dance and
the Montana Repertory Theatre, the Montana Theatre, Masquer Theatre, Open
Space Performance Lab, and shops for scenery, costume, lighting and sound.
Also housed in the building is the Broadcast Media Center which includes studios
for KUFM/National
Public Radio studios and KUFM-TV
Public Broadcasting System.
In 1977, the Montana Legislature appropriated funds for
the planning of a "new fine arts center" on the UM campus. An architect
was hired and planning began in 1978. The 1981 Legislature approved $7 million
for the building and charged the University with raising $1.1 million. Final
plans were approved in Summer, 1982, ground was broken at homecoming in Fall,
1982. In May, 1985, the building opened with a production of Cowboy,
a musical based on the life of Montana western artist Charles M. Russell.
At the time, this was the single most expensive public building in the State
of Montana.
The
Lobby serves the Montana Theatre, the Masquer
Theatre, and the Henry Meloy Gallery. It contains the box office, the Dean's
office complex, and the Montana Repertory Theatre office. It is dominated
by the rya tapestry, "Montana Horses." This tapestry, designed by
UM Art Professor Emeritus Rudy Autio, and woven by Anneli Hartikainen in Helsinki,
Finland, was given to the University through the generosity of Champion International
and Finnair.
The
Costume Shop employs
a full-time manager who oversees construction and implementation of designs.
The shop has both industrial and domestic sewing machines, sergers, and a
blind hemmer; a fitting area; and adjacent laundry and dyeing facilities.
The department maintains an extensive stock of modern and period costumes.
The
Lighting & Sound Shops are managed by a
graduate lighting/sound design student. Along with storage and repair facilities,
the lighting shp includes a laboratory area use
d
for student experimentation and classroom instruction. The sound shop includes
recording, storage, and repair facilities. The adjacent sound laboratory includes
a 20 x 8 mix console; 2-track, 4-track, and 8-track analogue audio recorders;
processing equipment; and DAT and miniDisk digital production equipment.
The
Masquer Theatre is a Black Box Theatre. The
performance space can be configured for theatre in the round, thrust, runway
or proscenium productions. It seats 80 audience members per seating section,
depending on the show and whether or not the pit can be used for seating.
There is a permanent 32' by 32' pit built into the floor of the theatre that
can be covered with traditional platforming. A permanent lighting and scenery
grid is suspended 18' above the audience. This grid is completely accessible
by catwalks. Lighting console, sound mixer, and stage manager position are
located in a booth suspended from the lighting grid. The permanent audio board
is a 12x12 Neotek mix console. There are no permanent speaker locations or
scenery rigging in this theatre. The lighting system is controlled by a Strand
Mantrix MX and 94 Strand CD80 dimmers. Lighting and audio circuits are located
on the grid and at the seating level of the theatre.
The
Montana Theatre is a 499-seat proscenium theatre.
The seating style is continental, meaning there is no center aisle. There
is not a bad seat in this theatre. There is plenty of room between rows which
allows for comfort during the watching of a play, concert or lecture. Acoustically,
the house is very good. At the rear of the house are three booths. The one
house right is a viewing booth for designers and directors to watch a show
and be able to converse or take notes without bothering the audience.
The
Open Space is the department's main dance classroom
and performance area. This studio includes a spring maple floor and flexible,
portable seating that can accommodate up to 150 audience members. A permanent
lighting grid with 53 dimmers/circuits is suspended 16' above the dance floor
and is controlled by a Strand Mantrix 2S lighting console. The permanent audio
system includes a Mackie CR1604 mixer and Tascam DAT and MiniDisk machines.
Four audio speakers are permanently hung from the grid.
The
Scenery Shop employs a full-time manager who
supervises the construction of all scenic elements, wood, metal, and plastic,
for all productions. This facility includes a 30' x 60' motorized paint frame
and a large area for painting and assembling scenery. Industrial machinery
is used for construction using wood and metal stock. Adjacent to the scenery
shop is the properties construction and storage area.