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Mac Rating: 5.00 | Votes: 1 | Date: 19/06/2026 22:34:00

Dark for nearly three decades after the 1985 earthquake, the Teatro Milan in the Colonia Juarez has lived two distinct lives. Its theatrical history reaches back to 1943, and in the 1970s the original house was acquired by the Universidad Veracruzana and run by scenographer Guillermo Barclay and stage director Manuel Montoro, who built a repertory company and hosted award-winning national and international productions until the earthquake of 19 September 1985 forced the building to close. For about 26 years the interior stood in ruins while the marquee survived intact. In January 2011 the actors and producers Mariana Garza and Pablo Perroni bought the property, intending to rebuild it from the ground up. When they first entered, the stage opening, the seating and the box once used by Montoro to direct were still standing, and the dressing rooms even held old costumes and toiletries, as if the company had simply stopped one day and never returned. The reconstruction, designed by scenographer Sergio Villegas with technical partners from the theatre-equipment firm Teletec, produced a modern four-level building of roughly 300 square metres, fitted with sophisticated audio, lighting and stage mechanics, raked seating with clean sight lines and a spiralift elevator. The complex reopened on 17 March 2013 and today houses three spaces: the Teatro Milan, the Foro Lucerna and the Liceo Milan Lucerna, a training centre offering acting, singing and production workshops. Located at Lucerna 64 on the corner of Milan, the venue has positioned itself as a serious home for private and independent theatre in the capital, returning a historic address to the city's cultural map after a long absence. Its blend of restored heritage and contemporary stagecraft has made it a reference point for the scene. The rebuilt house occupies around 300 square metres over four levels, with a stage opening of about 9.25 by 4.10 metres and a spiralift elevator among its mechanical refinements. On the second level the Liceo Milan Lucerna doubles as a rehearsal hall and a school, offering workshops in acting, singing, production, sound and lighting taught by established theatre professionals, so that academic and artistic activity runs through the building every day. The involvement of Teletec's leadership turned a supplier of stage equipment into a creative partner in the venue, and the combination of the Teatro Milan, the more flexible Foro Lucerna and the Liceo has given independent theatre in the capital a well-equipped, multi-room base.

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