Cultural center Nita Mukesh Ambani is a new cultural hub that has settled in the heart of Mumbai’s commercial district. It’s an ambitious real estate project, a giant of brass and glass outfitted with all the latest entertainment-related tech accoutrements. The center is home to a three-story art gallery, an intimate 150-seat experimental theater, and a larger 250-seat studio theater, which has been hosting shows since late last year, but the “jewel in the crown,” so to speak. , should be unveiled this weekend. The Grand Théâtre, so named because it is as grand as any historical monument, will open its doors to the audience, with a visionary spectacle Feroz Abbas Khan “The Great Indian Musical: Civilization for the Nation.”
“People would go to Broadway or the West End and embrace the idea that something like that couldn’t happen in India”explain Feroz Abbas Khanincluding staging success, Mughal-e-Azamis the closest thing to a Broadway-level production in contemporary Indian theatre. “Even if we had the talent and imagination, we do not have the infrastructure, financial support and means to make this type of production. At the Nita Mukesh Ambani Cultural Center Grand Theatre, we finally have an infrastructure far better than can be seen anywhere else in the world.”
This theater was designed by Steve Clem And Nick Wolfscale by TVS Design, in collaboration with Brian Hall Theater Project Consultant. It was modeled after the iconic Dolby Theater in Hollywood. It features 2,000 seats, all of which have an unobstructed view of the stage, a world-class Dolby Atmos Surround sound system, a 100-seat orchestra pit, a 69 steel system and, to top it all off, a stunning LED light sculpture with 8,400 crystals Swarovski. “Artists are no longer limited by their imagination”state Feroz Abbas Khan.
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