Madison Square Theatre (New York). In 1879 Steele MacKaye gutted what had been Augustin Daly's first Fifth Avenue Theatre and which had been restored only two years before after a disastrous fire in 1873. He redesigned the playhouse into one of the world's most ingenious theatres, with an elevator stage that allowed rapid scene changes, with the orchestra playing from a box above the proscenium, and with the first attempt at a primitive air‐conditioning system. The house seated only about seven hundred playgoers and was so arranged as to give the impression of a drawing room. George Odell recalled, “The exquisite interior, in which no color seemed to prevail at the expense of others. . .gave an effect of rich, simple elegance hitherto unknown in New York theatres.” MacKaye's intention was to form a stock company on the order of the




