The Inaugural Artists
The new Doris Duke Theatre will open its doors in July 2025. This new “living lab for the future of dance” will become one of the most technologically advanced theaters in the world dedicated to dance, providing a space for artists seeking to integrate artificial intelligence, extended reality, robotics, and immersive platforms into live performance.
Watch the film to immerse yourself in the possibilities this makerspace holds for the future of dance. And click the button below to explore the recently announced artists in the new theater’s first season.
Also in the Duke's Inaugural Season
Interactive Exhibition
Katherine Helen Fisher, Emmy-nominated director, choreographer, director, and performer, will create the interactive exhibition Hyperreal Futures: Choreographing the Algorithmic Body. Hosted in the new Duke’s gallery space, this exhibit blends choreography and technology, inviting you to explore the boundaries of the human body and digital expression.
Digital-First Works
Experience groundbreaking digital performances from acclaimed artists Shamel Pitts and Andrew Schneider. These virtual-first works, crafted to reach audiences worldwide, are designed for an intimate online experience—available wherever you are.
Pillow Lab Residency
In fall 2025, Grisha Coleman launches a bold new project in the Pillow Lab: The Movement Undercommons. This residency will focus on developing a motion-capture performance that dives deep into the body’s unique language and movement.
Construction is underway for Jacob’s Pillow’s reimagined Doris Duke Theatre. The bold new theater and makerspace for dance is a flexible venue on the site of the original Doris Duke Theatre in Becket, Massachusetts.
Guided by lead architect Mecanoo and architect of record Marvel in collaboration with technical theatre consultant Charcoalblue and renowned artist, MacArthur Fellow Jeffrey Gibson, the design embraces the Pillow’s diverse history to create an accessible and inclusive space for dance, dialogue, collaboration, and education fit for the Pillow’s second century. The new building will maintain the intimacy of the original studio theater, while incorporating a digital backbone. The ability for the facility to adapt to different programmatic needs as well as future technical upgrades will be key to the theater’s purpose as a makerspace and digital lab, and will ensure long-term resiliency and growth.
In addition to the landmark naming gift of $10 million from The Doris Duke Foundation in November 2022, Jacob’s Pillow has received leadership support from the Knight Foundation to support digital implementation, as well as generous commitments from Barbara and Amos Hostetter, the Barr Foundation, Sarah Arison and the Arison Arts Foundation, and the Massachusetts Cultural Facilities Fund which supported the pre-schematic design phase of the project. The campaign goal is approximately $35 million which is inclusive of construction of the new Doris Duke Theatre and related capital improvements to the Pillow’s campus, as well as the establishment of an endowment fund which will help support the aims and operations of the new theater.
For press inquiries and further information, contact Kendall Lockhart, Public Relations & Communications Coordinator, at klockhart@jacobspillow.org. To read the full May 2023 press release about the architecture and design teams click here.
The Pillow seeks to honor the building’s context on the ancestral lands of the Muh-he-con-ne-ok, or Mohican peoples, who are now known as the Stockbridge-Munsee Community and reside in Wisconsin. Additionally, the Pillow honors the Agawam, Nipmuc, and Pocumtuc who also made their homes in what is now known as Western Massachusetts.
A national coalition of donors and funders have already generously committed to support the future of dance and Jacob’s Pillow through this campaign. To learn more about the campaign and how your support can make a difference, please contact, Lila Kanner, Chief Philanthropy Officer, lkanner@jacobspillow.org or at (413) 243-9919 x125. Stay tuned for new opportunities to engage with the reimagined Doris Duke Theatre’s construction and progress during the 2024 Festival Season.
A future-forward theater
Multi-use flexibility will allow Jacob’s Pillow to support performances, events, residencies, and more, sometimes simultaneously. The theater will be fully accessible for audiences and artists and will seat up to 230 patrons in the main performance space, with an array of seating and stage configurations. The reimagined Doris Duke Theatre will be approximately 20,000 sq. ft., compared with the former Duke’s roughly 8,500 sq. ft. footprint.
Two lobbies with sliding doors will create multiple entrances and exits. The west lobby will provide a covered and ventilated space for pre-show talks alongside a new exhibition space. The east lobby will serve as a warm-up and rehearsal space for artists, and can also host receptions and meetings.
Indigenous design principles and values have been incorporated in the planning for the new theater and Indigenous artists will contribute visual art installations, a medicinal garden with local and indigenous plantings, and a fire pit for gatherings and celebrations. Sustainable initiatives including a green roof, energy efficient design, and rainwater collection and reuse are incorporated throughout the building.
Explore the
new theater
At this pivotal moment in our history, we’re thrilled to share details behind the development of a visionary project: The reimagined Doris Duke Theatre. Watch this video to learn more about this new theater, which will look to the future with advanced technological capabilities, flexible performance spaces, and a sustainable, accessible design.
Robust Technology Infrastructure
The new theater will be technologically equipped to ensure that the creative appetites of artists will be served in the decades to come. This includes powerful and intuitive network-based, installed systems to enable flexible deployment of production-specific equipment with building-wide data and fiber-optic connections; high-bandwidth network and video signal infrastructure to support projectors and cameras with a dedicated video control room for filming, streaming, editing and broadcasting; a specifically calibrated sound system with digital mixing and processing and a dedicated sound mix position within the theater; and a dedicated workshop for set and mechanical fabrication.
Community and Accessibility
In addition to summer Festival performances, the new building is designed with a year-round, community focus and ease of use for special events. Safety, comfort, and accessibility will be improved for audiences, artists, and staff. This will include catwalks for improved technical installation, additional bathrooms, an enlarged green room and dressing rooms for artists, mezzanine access for late seating, and more accessible seating options.
STEP INSIDE WITH 360-DEGREE VIEWS
Mecanoo provides a virtual-reality window inside the Doris Duke Theatre with these simulated interiors.
On a desktop or laptop computer, click and hold your cursor, then drag to see your surroundings from these select viewpoints.
On a mobile device or tablet, move your screen through the space in front of you, and the rendered visuals will change automatically based on your point of view.
MEET THE DESIGN TEAM
Netherlands-based architecture firm Mecanoo, led by their renowned Creative Director and Founding Partner Francine Houben, is serving as the lead architect for the new building project, in partnership with New York-based architecture firm Marvel as the U.S.-based architect of record and landscape designer. Theater, acoustic, and experience consultants Charcoalblue are supporting the project.
Jeffrey Gibson, Choctaw/Cherokee, is serving as a consultant on the building’s relationship to the site and Indigenous values, a key element of the building’s design.
The design team was selected through a competitive, international process led by Susanna Sirefman of Dovetail Design Strategists in 2021.
“Jacob’s Pillow has always been at the forefront. The new Duke Theatre will enable Jacob’s Pillow to harness the digital revolution to serve a more inclusive, innovative, and engaging vision for dance.”
President and CEO, Doris Duke Foundation
“The design creates a year-round space that will serve as an incubator for a new generation of artists seeking to integrate technology into live performance and create art native to the digital realm. It will be a porous, indoor/outdoor space for creation, performance, and community engagement that speaks to the lessons we’ve learned during the pandemic about the need for community-building, and our innate connection with nature, which we at the Pillow treasure greatly.”
Executive and Artistic Director, Jacob’s Pillow
“We wanted to make a building which embodied Indigenous principles of connecting with the land and thinking seven generations forward. The sequence of moving between outdoors and indoors and the sculptural layering of the building emphasizes the feeling of movement in space, while firmly rooted to the site in this special place in the Berkshires.”
Creative Director and Founding Partner, Mecanoo
Mecanoo
Lead Architect
Mecanoo, officially founded in Delft, the Netherlands, in 1984, is made up of a highly multidisciplinary staff of creative professionals from 25 countries. The team includes architects, interior designers, urban planners, and landscape architects as well as architectural technicians and support staff.
Mecanoo is led by Francine Houben (Creative Director & Founding Partner), Floris Overheul (Financial Director), Dick van Gameren (Design & Research Partner), and Partners/Architects Nuno Fontarra, Rick Splinter and Arne Lijbers.
Learn moreMarvel
Architect Partner
For more than three decades, Marvel has worked at the intersection of public and private space, creating intentionally timeless design solutions that integrate nature and context. Marvel is the recipient of over 125 international industry awards, including the AIA’s highest honor, the 2019 Presidential Citation for integrating design and community service.
Learn moreCharcoalblue
Technical Theatre Consultant
Charcoalblue is the world’s leading multinational theater, acoustic, and experience consultancy. Since its foundation in London in 2004, it has grown to a team of over one hundred with studios in New York, Chicago, Bristol, Glasgow, and Melbourne.
Learn moreJeffrey Gibson
Consultant
Drawing influence from popular music, fashion, literature, cultural and critical theory, and his own individual heritage, Jeffrey Gibson, based in nearby Columbia County, recontextualizes the familiar to offer a succinct commentary on cultural hybridity and the assimilation of modernist artistic strategies within contemporary art. Gibson’s Cherokee and Choctaw lineage has imparted a recognizable aesthetic to his beaded works exploring narrative deconstructions of both image and language as transmitted through figuration.
Learn MoreLead support for Doris Duke Theatre is provided by the Doris Duke Foundation.
If you are interested in finding out more about the campaign, or making a contribution, contact Lila Kanner, Chief Philanthropy Officer, lkanner@jacobspillow.org.
Remembering the Original Duke: Take a virtual walking tour of our digital Doris Duke Theatre Memorial Exhibition using a 3D scan of the original building, and browse the stories, photos, and videos in our archives.
Stay Updated: Receive the latest news and information about the reimagined Doris Duke Theatre by joining our email list, and follow this project in the coming months. The new theater is set to open on July 9, 2025.
Learn More: Listen to episode 44 of our podcast PillowVoices, which highlights an exhibition at The Museum of Modern Art by visual artist Yve Laris Cohen featuring the remains of the Pillow's Doris Duke Theatre.