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Judy and Arthur Zankel Hall
Carnegie Hall
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N, Q, R at 57th St.-Seventh Ave.; 1, A, B, C, D at 59th St.-Columbus Circle
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Profile
Whereas Carnegie Hall’s two other auditoriums, Stern and Weill, both feature cream-colored plaster, mohair fabric, and warm woods detailed in bronze, subterranean Zankel feels like a sacred underworld swathed in sea glass and forest green. Home to Carnegie Hall’s first performance, a piano recital in 1891, Zankel was also the last to officially rejoin the complex. The space was renamed Carnegie Lyceum in 1895, became an off-Broadway stage in 1956, morphed into an art-film house in 1960, and was leased by Cineplex Odeon until 1997. Only then did Carnegie Hall jump in to reclaim it. After 6,300 cubic yards of bedrock were excavated, the expanded, $72-million Judy and Arthur Zankel Hall opened in 2003. Concertgoers on both the parterre and mezzanine have clear views of the stage and the acoustics are, of course, marvelous.