It's a lovely theater, Cristian! The 'palcos' remind me a lot of my own 'first theater' in San Juan, PR, the
Teatro Tapia in Old San Juan. Same tropical feel with the 'open style' railing with very thin columns. It was recently (2 yrs ago?) restored to its full 19th-C splendour. If I find a photo, I'll post. The Tapia is the oldest theater in the Western Hemisphere still in use - from 1824.
The
Teatro Municipal in Lima, Peru, (my new home) is also very old and also recently restored to its magnificence after a horrible fire in the late '90s (a-la Venice's Fenice). Actually, Lima boasts two grand old opera houses, the Municipal (built ca-1910) and what is now known as
Teatro Segura but was actually Lima's
first 'Teatro Municipal' (built ca 1880)...and the place in front of which Ashton stood to see Pavlova alight from her carriage! [I've also visited the first theater in which Ashton himself danced, as a child -- the old movie theater
'Teatro Colon,' right next door to the hotel in which I was living for the past month!] I've taken photos of all these great theaters and will try to figure out a way to post (or might forward to someone with photo-posting privileges).
Pavlova danced in all of these theaters (except the Colon-Lima), by the way. A lot people would be amazed at the sheer number of grand opera houses remaining in Latin America.
Not the greatest of photos, but here is my 'new home theater' in Lima:
http://commandopera....l-de-lima-peru/
and...from the reinauguration in 2010:
http://enperublog.co...icipal-de-lima/
Then the older Teatro Segura-Lima, which used to have the name 'Teatro Municipal' in Ashton's time:
http://es.wikipedia....i/Teatro_Segura
Thanks, Cristian, for starting this walk down 'theater memory lane'! I'm sure that others fondly remember their own special home-town theaters where they first caught the ballet bug.