Meiji-za (Keijō)

Meiji-za (明治座) was a theater in Keijō (Seoul), Korea, Empire of Japan. It opened on October 7, 1936, and was located in Myeong-dong. Upon the liberation of Korea in 1945, the theater became owned by Koreans. It was renamed a number of times until it closed in 1973 and was used as an office building. It reopened in 2009 as Myeongdong Theater, which still operates today.

History
The theater was named for the Japanese Emperor Meiji. It had one underground floor and four above-ground floors that could seat 1,100 people. It mainly catered to Japanese settlers in Korea, and showed mainly Japanese-language productions. The building's design was inspired by that of famous theater in Japan Taishokwan.

After the liberation of Korea in 1945, the theater was renamed in January 1946 to International Theater. It was renamed again on December 1947 to Shigonggwan, and began screening movies. On June 1, 1957, it was renamed to Myeongdong Arts Center, and in 1962 it was again renamed to Myeongdong National Theater. It closed in 1973, as a new national theater opened at Namsan Mountain. The building was sold to a financial company and used as an office. The building was in danger of being demolished for a long period of time after that, but a movement arose in the performing arts community to preserve it. As part of these efforts, the building was purchased by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism in 2009, and it reopened as Myeongdong Theater on June 5, 2009.