This small museum and library, located on the fourth floor of
the Veterans Building at 401 Van Ness, may be small in size, but
it is indeed, large in stature. As perhaps the preeminent museum
dedicated to the Performing Arts in the United States, this museum
is a rare jewel that the visitor, as well as the serious scholar
will both enjoy.
This free museum includes an unusual array of over two million
items in its references, circulating and special collections. The
Performing Arts Library & Museum, or PALM, is dedicated to the
live performing arts - music, dance, opera, and theater in all its
incarnations. The items in the museum include: costumes of all
shapes and sizes, playbills from theatrical plays and musicals,
music and radio recordings, scrapbooks, biographies of famous as
well as forgotten performers, props, artifacts and set
decorations, posters, paintings, books, photographs, domestic and
foreign magazines, letters, videotapes, films and other materials
that illustrate our love of the arts. The diversity of style, and
the propensity to perform for others, is a unique artifact of our
cultural makeup well preserved in this Library and Museum.
The Bay Area’s rich performing legacy is on permanent display
at the museum. Many fascinating photos and drawings from the city’s
cultural heritage are available, from the Alcazar theater of the
1880's to Orpheum of today, still going strong. Papers, posters,
articles and recordings chronicling The San Francisco Ballet,
Opera and Symphony, The Stern Grove Festivals, Ethnic Dance
festivals and Rock collections are also available at the museum.
There is even an interesting exhibit of historic sheet music,
before recordings made this medium obsolete.
PALM also houses a Musical Theater Recording Collection that
chronicles Broadway, British, and foreign cast albums and also
features film and television musicals.
PALM offers many courses, workshops, lectures, and
conversations with legendary contemporary performers. Carol
Channing, Yehudi Menuhin and Patti LuPone were special guests.
Audiences lucky enough to be present at these talks enjoy a rare
and intimate portrait of these artists.
This little museum is definitely one to see, if you are a
Performing Arts or American history aficionado. You will be
surprised.
The Museum is open Wednesday from 1:00 PM - 7:00 P.M., Thursday
and Friday from 11:00 AM - 5:00 PM, and Saturday Noon - 5:00 PM.
It is closed on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. The museum is free to
all persons at all times.