Home Page
2012: this year!
Celebrating
C.S.P.S.
Hall's
125th Anniversary
& Mardi Gras
2007:
Sokol Minnesota
125th Anniversary
CSPS, Sokol & immigrant history
SLOVO
Sokol's Newsletter
Taneční Mládež
Children's Dance Group
Theater
and music
at the C.S.P.S. Hall
Theater Index | Music | Plays | Stage backdrops
CSPS Sokol Hall Theater
In 1879, 100+ members of Č.S.P.S Lodge #12 "Čech" purchased
a lot for $600 from (sitting) Mayor Charles Dawson of the City of St. Paul. They then purchased and moved a
wooden school house onto the property, and built a stage to accommodate
the free expression of their culture, as well as their philosophy of
"free thought." (In their native lands, Czechs were under
the Germanic Hapsburgs, Slovaks under the Hungarians, while both their languages were Slavic.)
The first organizations of the Czech and Slovak
immigrants in the West End were a Workers Union and Slovanska Lipa,
a literary society. The library loan records document
their book exchanges since that time, though in 1889 Slovanska Lipa was absorbed
by Č.S.P.S Lodge #12.
In 1882, Sokol St. Paul started as an extension of the international fitness movement, based on the early Greek model that bodily health produces moral and and mental health. Hence Sokol became the programming arm of the Czech and Slovak immigrant community, while Č.S.P.S provided the financial foundation.
In
1886 that first hall burned, and planning began immediately to replace
it with a two story structure in 1887. Through this time Sokols
began an active program of theater, music performances, and
entertainment in their native language, and even took programming to
outlying Czech/Slovak communities throughout the Midwest. Our
collection of over 200 "community" plays, published between 1880 and
1930 resides in our archives and is of great interest by the Art and
Theater Institute in Prague. An inventory is underway. In 1893 the composer Antonin Dvorak
was celebrated on our stage during his visit to the Midwest. In
1917 a third, mezzanine level meetingroom was added, and is filled with
original furnishings from the 1800's. In 1975 the hall was
threatened with demolition, and local Czechs and Slovaks, and their
organizations, united with the West 7th Fort Road Federation and placed
it under the protective arm of the National Register of Historic Sites,
Building #77000763.
In
1931, Vic Hubal, Sr. painted six backdrops that evoked scenes of his
native Bohemia. Their unique "fly" (raise and lower) system of
pulley and rope is hand operated, an historic theatric rarity; only the
front backdrop of the Charles Bridge in Prague has a counerweight to
make the task easier. The Sokol Minnesota stage also has two sets of
"splatter flats."
One,
the "cool" (grey), the other "warm" (beige) are ten feet tall with nine
pieces each. Unlike modern hinges sets, these are lashed together
to form sets. The scenic assets also include one roofed cottage,
several flats of "brick," and three trees. The footlights were
electrified when the stage was relocated in the 1917 addition that added
the mezzanine Meeting Room and the grand staircase.
We are fortunate to have a very interesting accumulation of ledger books, scripts and programs dealing with theater productions at the CSPS hall. The first program dates from 1902 and is a review in nine acts: 5 musical numbers, 2 comic skits, a one act comedy
Smetanova Hubička (Sweet Kiss), and a solo act by Jan Šrámek. In addition, there are 203 different scripts in the Czech language that were considered for productions, and at least 65 programs that detail the author, cast, director. Some indicate that there would be a dance afterwards which would make for a long evening! Many of the scripts are comedies dealing with village life in Bohemia prior to 1900, and well suited to community theater production. The earliest production we can document consisted of three short one-act comedic plays performed in 1908. The plays were
Poprvé u Fotografa (First Time Sitting for the Photographer),
Smetanova Hubička (Sweet Kiss) and Vypáleny Před Souderu (Burned before the Court).