Information on:

Historic Albany Theatre

Historic Albany Theatre
107-109 North Jackson Street
229-343-5524

History:
Southwest Georgia's leading center for the performing arts and the cornerstone of downtown Albany, Georgia development, was built in 1927 on land owned by Samuel Farkas, a Jewish immigrant who became a prominent Albany citizen after the Civil War. This theatre was built on land that had previously been the site of Farkas' livery stable and farm implement business. Adolph Gortakowsky, a land tenant of Farkas, had developed the theatre concept and given the plan to the Farkas estate. Architect Roy A. Benjamin, founder of Kemp, Bunch and Jackson, designed the theatre and built it in Classical Revival style. Historic Albany Theatre then became Albany, Georgia's first building constructed with steel beams.

In the early 1970s, Albany Theatre was abandoned. Oglethorpe Development Group, Inc. founded in 1996 by James R. Miller, an African-American, purchased the theatre from the Samuel Farkas estate and is currently restoring the theatre to its former glory as a performing arts center. The theatre has a Restrictive Deed, guaranteeing that it will remain a performing arts center. In August 2006, Historic Albany Theatre was placed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Historic Albany Theatre is not affiliated with AmericanTowns Media
Select a Georgia town to find
the Best Things-To-Do and Places To Go around you
Appling County
Bacon County
Baker County
Ben Hill County
Bibb County
Bleckley County
Candler County
Chattahoochee County
Crisp County
Dawson County
Dougherty County
Echols County
Forsyth County
Glascock County
Hancock County
Heard County
Jeff Davis County
Jenkins County
Johnson County
Jones County
Lincoln County
Long County
Lumpkin County
Marion County
Miller County
Paulding County
Pulaski County
Putnam County
Quitman County
Rockdale County
Schley County
Taliaferro County
Toombs County
Treutlen County
Webster County
Wheeler County