Mission Statement
Created and sustained by the people of New Hampshire, the Capitol Center for the Arts shall inspire, educate and entertain audiences by providing both the finest venue for the performing arts and a wide range of professionally excellent and artistically significant presentations. It shall also serve as a resource and gathering place for the community at large.
History
Opened in 1927, the Capitol Theatre was a
prime stop on the Vaudeville circuit, and, later, Concord's
premier movie house and concert hall. Over the years, however, the
theater slipped into disrepair and in 1989 it was closed.
With $4.2 million raised in support by the newly formed,
non-profit Capitol Center for the Arts, and 250 volunteers
contributing over 3,000 hours to paint and restore the
Egyptian-motif artwork, the renamed theater was opened in November
1995. The Chubb Theatre was named in recognition of the
project's largest benefactor, Chubb Life.
The 1,310-seat theater is now equipped to present many of
today's lavish Broadway shows. It has been modernized with
new heating, air conditioning, electric and plumbing systems,
handicapped accessibility including an elevator, a new lobby and
vestibule, computerized box office system, updated backstage
facilities and restored seats.
The Capitol Center's mission is to be a resource for the
entire community. Accordingly, the Center has presented a wide mix
of high-quality events, including Broadway shows, dance
performances, pop and country stars, family shows, international
performances, school-time shows and business conferences and
seminars.
Today, the Capitol Center for the Arts is the largest and most
successful performing arts center in New Hampshire and has helped
position Concord as a cultural destination. Its richly varied
programming attracts diversified audiences. Broadway, ballet and
country & western fans alike travel from all over New England
to attend performances at the Capitol Center.
The Capitol Center educational programs attract some 25,000
school children a year from throughout New Hampshire. Educators and
parents prize the school-series performances, teacher workshops,
outreach activities and symposia on such topics as racism and
intolerance. Working with local and state educators, the Capitol
Center has successfully linked the school series to statewide
curricula goals, making the programming even more valuable. Tickets
and rental rates are kept affordable, subsidizing nonprofit
organizations and school children.
Each year, approximately $10,000 in tickets are donated to
organizations serving disadvantaged children and families,
including the Concord Boys and Girls Club, the Concord Housing
Authority, Child and Family Services, the Friends Program,
Merrimack Valley Day Care, The Children's Place and the
Senior Companion Program.
The Capitol Center also houses The Governor's Hall, a
full-service function room that can accommodate up to 350 guests,
and the adjacent Kimball House, a Victorian mansion featuring a
stately, formal dining room and board room.