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Guthrie venue to close Sunday

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From the Associated Press

When Hamlet is bid a final “good night, sweet prince” on the Guthrie Theater stage in Minneapolis, it also will mark a farewell to a venerated auditorium that helped birth the U.S. regional theater movement.

More than four decades after Sir Tyrone Guthrie started his theater in the nation’s heartland as a reaction to the commercialization of Broadway, the Guthrie will close with a last performance of Shakespeare’s “Hamlet” on Sunday. Weeks later, the Guthrie will reopen across town in a new, $125-million three-stage complex.

The old Guthrie will dim its lights 43 years to the day that it opened -- also with “Hamlet” -- on May 7, 1963.

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Not everyone is ready to accept the end of the venue, which probably faces the wrecking ball late this summer. Some want it preserved for its cultural significance and hope a buyer will step forward. But the city’s Walker Art Center conducted a reuse study five years ago and found no groups to take it over.

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