Entering the Benedum while the center’s chandeliers are lowered to ground level for their annual polishing is like walking into a museum and seeing a piece of art you’ve observed only from the pages of books. Finally, you can get close enough to discover textures, to see the precision and imperfection that reveal a human hand behind the work’s creation.
The massive main chandelier suspended high over the theater balcony is adorned with more than 500,000 crystal pieces. It was installed in 1928 — when the theater was called “The Stanley” — and has soared above acts as varied as Laurel and Hardy, Frank Sinatra, Lena Horne, the Grateful Dead and Bob Marley. It’s now a signature part of the Benedum Center for the Performing Arts, home to the Pittsburgh Opera, Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre and Pittsburgh CLO.
Next time you find yourself in one of the center’s 2,800 seats, glance up at that main chandelier and all of its glistening pieces and think of the workers behind its creation. We’re told they toiled for a thousand hours to string the crystal together. We’re guessing they had sore fingers.