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    Sit-In Lunch Counter Transformed Into Inclusive Woolworth Theatre

    Article submittedBy Article submittedMarch 8, 2022No Comments4 Mins Read
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    New ownership resurrected the former Woolworth building in downtown Nashville, honoring the historic Civil Rights sit-ins with inclusive live performances at the new Woolworth Theatre.

    The theatre, set to open mid-2022, will accommodate 400 people with floor, box and VIP seating. It will host live musicians, plays and other acts such as songwriter nights while also serving as a cocktail lounge.

    The Woolworth building in downtown Nashville has gone through many owners over the past few decades including a restaurant, Woolworth on 5th, which closed in March of 2020. Its newest owners said they are taking extra steps to honor the building’s deep history.

    “When we started with this project, it was to do something that hadn’t been done in Nashville,” said Joe Bravo, Woolworth Theatre vice president of operations.

    Musician and Woolworth Theatre owner and creator Chuck Wicks and his team dreamt up a new kind of performing space in a historic Nashville building.

    “It kind of goes back to the history of this place, where, you know, the sit-in movements, everything happened for inclusivity. So we want to ensure that this building also encompasses everything about inclusivity including music, you know, plays, acts; anything that can fit in our space,” explained Woolworth Theatre CEO Keval Sheth.Claire KopskyThe 400-seat, ticketed, theatre will host live musicians, plays and other acts while also serving as a cocktail lounge.

    For decades, the building was home to a Woolworth retail store.

    “Woolworths was pretty much the five and dime of its time. It was kind of like the Walmart of its time. And it was known for great bargains, great shopping and then also they had their lunch counters,” explained Bravo. “Where history intervenes was during the 1960s where the students from historically Black colleges and citizens of Nashville took it upon themselves to try to challenge the segregation policies in the city.”

    In February of 1960, all eyes were on the Woolworth in downtown Nashville when a Freedom Rider sit-in protest turned violent.

    “On February 27… when the police came, they arrested all the demonstrators. They didn’t arrest any of the patrons that perpetrated violence on the protesters. The protesters, one of them being future, Congressman John Lewis, sat here and passively sat there while customers beat them, berated them, put cigarettes out on their skin, and a bunch of just brutal, brutal tactics that they sat there stoically, and just held their ground,” recounted Bravo. “And it was an incredibly brave demonstration of passive resistance… It was John Lewis’s first arrest for civil disobedience.”Claire KopskyThe Woolworth lunch counter in downtown Nashville garnered national attention in February 1960 when a peaceful sit-in which included Rep. John Lewis turned violent leading to dozens of protester arrests.

    The country watched the protest in the papers and soon the Nashville Woolworth lunch counter sit-ins were inspiring other peaceful protests throughout the South.

    “This was the domino that led to the desegregation of all of Nashville and really the domino that felt to desegregate the country,” stated Bravo. “It’s very important that we keep those stories alive so that we can learn from it and know that that it is a possibility and we can’t let it be repeated.”

    “Fortunately, we’re in a time to where we’ve been able to understand what happened… there’s enough there. We’ve been able to speak to people at Fisk University, other historians here in town and then fortunately for us, we were also able to meet and become really good friends with Representative Lewis’ family members, especially his nephew Jerrick,” explained Sheth.

    “For us to have support from him the rest of the Lewis family was was profound for us, and also a blessing,” said Sheth. “Because of that, we were able to learn a lot more about not only what occurred here, but the type of man Representative Lewis and a lot of the other Freedom Riders were.”Claire KopskyWoolworth Theatre CEO Keval Sheth and Vice President of Operations Joe Bravo look at Woolworth original lunch counter display in the theatre’s front window in downtown Nashville.

    Through conversations with Jerrick Lewis, more of the history came out of the walls and is being poured into the Woolworth Theatre. That includes the theatre’s logo which is the symbol on the original railings.

    “Hopefully we’ve done it right, and we can inspire one person to crack a book, to Google a website so that they can learn what happened here,” said Bravo. “I can’t hope for anything more than that… if we can just educate one person on what happened here, for me, that’s enough.”

    Sign up for the Woolworth Theatre’s newsletter to receive information and ticket links for upcoming shows.

    This article was first published by News Channel 5.

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