Solís Theatre
Teatro Solis in 2016 | |
| Address | Buenos Aires 678 Montevideo Uruguay |
|---|---|
| Owner | Government of Montevideo |
| Type | Municipal (Montevideo) |
| Capacity | 1500 |
| Current use | Opera, Ballet, Concerts, Plays |
| Construction | |
| Opened | 1856 |
| Renovated | 1996 - 2004 |
| Years active | 161 |
| Architect | Carlo Zucchi Francisco Xavier Garmendia Víctor Rabú |
| Website | |
| www | |
Solís Theatre (Spanish: Teatro Solís) is Uruguay's most important and renowned theater. It opened in 1856. The building was designed by the Italian architect Carlo Zucchi. It is located in Montevideo's Old Town, right next to the Plaza Independencia. The theatre was named after the explorer Juan Díaz de Solís, who was the first European explorer to land in modern day Uruguay.
In 1998, the government of Montevideo started a major reconstruction of the theatre, which included two columns designed by Philippe Starck. The reconstruction was completed in 2004 with the re-opening taking place in August of that year. Acoustic studies of the rehabilitation project was entrusted to Jerome Falala of the French studio Avel Acoustique.
Tomás Giribaldi's La Parisina, considered the first Uruguayan national opera, was premiered at the Solís on 14 September 1878.