"[The Folger boasts] a reconstruction of an Elizabethan playhouse stunningly contrived to stage plays with the old atmosphere but with all modern appliances."
–The New York Times
April 24, 1932
The intimate Elizabethan Theatre is the setting for Folger Theatre productions, early-music concerts by the Folger Consort, PEN/Faulkner lectures and readings, Folger Poetry programs, family activities, and many education programs, including the Folger’s student performance festivals.
With its three-tiered wooden balconies, carved oak columns, and half-timbered facade, the Theatre evokes the courtyard of an English Renaissance inn. Overhead, a canopy represents the sky. In Shakespeare’s day, such inns sometimes served as playhouses for traveling groups of players, who performed on a raised platform at one end while spectators gathered in the yard and on the balconies above.
In the lobby just outside the Theatre, visitors are greeted near the door by a marble statue of Puck, Shakespeare’s mischievous sprite from A Midsummer Night’s Dream. This is the original statue created for the Folger grounds by the award-winning sculptor Brenda Putnam in 1932 and restored in 2001. Today, an aluminum replica presides over the Folger’s outdoor fountain.
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"The little ceiling in the entry of the theatre is made up of the coats of arms of some people who were either patrons of Shakespeare, or who contributed to the support of some of the players companies for which Shakespeare either wrote, or in which he acted. The stage ceiling is developed from the coat of arms, the crest and supporters of Queen Elizabeth.... The details of the decorations on the beams and rafters were developed mostly from English mediaeval wood-carving, particularly the birds in one of the upper galleries, which design was found on an old English chest. The detail of the small entry ceiling was inspired by painted cartouches on the ceiling of the old Bodleian Library in Oxford."
–Austin Purves, Jr.
Artist responsible for the painting
From a letter dated June 1, 1932