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Rows of dressing rooms, nestled along a side of the armory's main hall, are hardly the place in which a diva would be happy. Each is designed for two people and has two plain desks, two metal chairs and two mirrors. A simple red curtain keeps them private. Boyd said visitors have remarked that they look like something from Amsterdam's red-light district, and so he has cheekily dubbed the section "New Amsterdam." The RSC home base is Stratford-upon-Avon, the Bard's birthplace, but the troupe also performs regularly in London and tours extensively around the world. It has two theaters in Stratford
-- the main arena that inspired the traveling version and has about 100 more seats, and the smaller Swan Theatre. The Armory, built between 1877 and 1881, fills an entire city block on New York's Upper East Side. Its main column-free drill hall is one of the largest unobstructed spaces of its kind in New York. Lately, the staff has invited unconventional works that could not otherwise be mounted in traditional performance halls and museums. Boyd said he and the company considered going to a conventional theater before building and hauling their replica theater all the way to New York. But he said he and his workers thought they could do it
-- and it means future tours with the moveable theater may make it worth all the cost and effort. "It's ludicrously ambitious. It enables the possibility of doing it again much more easily and more cheaply. And, I think, it means the audience will have a better time," said Boyd. "It gives New York an unusual way for artists to communicate with the audience." ___ Online:
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