Father Pitt

Why should the beautiful die?


O’Reilly Theater and Theater Square

O’Reilly Theater

A quarter-century ago, the O’Reilly opened with a brand-new play by August Wilson (King Hedley II). That makes it a newcomer by Penn Avenue standards. But Penn Avenue has been the heart of the theater district for a century and a half, and the O’Reilly stands on the exact site of Library Hall, whose auditorium was used as the Bijou, Victorian Pittsburgh’s most prestigious theater, where touring stars like Dion Boucicault played. The site had been a parking lot for more than sixty years before the O’Reilly was built, but we can think of this theater as continuing the Bijou tradition.

O’Reilly Theater

The building was designed by Michael Graves, the postmodernist whose brand of neoneoclassicism was influential in the movement. Mr. Graves also designed Theater Square next door, which houses the Greer Cabaret and a well-dressed parking garage.

O’Reilly Theater and Theater Square
Penn Avenue with the O’Reilly Theater
Nikon COOLPIX P100.

Old Pa Pitt has been dumping quite a load of pictures in these pages for the past few days. He realized that the pictures have been backing up and decided he ought to try to catch up with them. But how backed up were they? Here is a picture of the O’Reilly taken with a Kodak Signet 40 in June of 2000, when the building was only six months old. Father Pitt has never published it here before.

O’Reilly in 2000


One response to “O’Reilly Theater and Theater Square”

  1. von Hindenburg

    Boy, I remember seeing HMS Pinafore here when I was a Sophomore in high school. That would’ve been 2000 or early 2001. Being a kid from darkest Washington County, I didn’t realize how new the place was or what an upswing the Cultural District was on. I just assumed The City was and always had been glittering and chockablock with culture.

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