Faulkner family stable, turned Oxford landmark theater gets spruced up
Published 10:17 am Friday, December 14, 2018
At Tuesday’s Board of Aldermen meeting, The Lyric Oxford got approval to lease eight parking spots in order to begin erecting a new marquee.
The renovations, which were approved way back in January this year, began Wednesday on the front of the building, and construction was expected to last two to three days.
The marquee, however, won’t look new, as it’s modeled after the Lyric’s marquee that was on the front of the building back in 1940. But, according to The Lyric’s owner Bradley Bishop, these renovations are the first of many.
“We’ve been keeping an almost running to-do list,” he said.
Bishop said renovating The Lyric’s marquee is part of just fixing some wear and tear the building had, and he worked with the Historic Preservation Commission meeting to come up with the idea for the 1940’s look.
The marquee is also just the first of many renovations, however Bishop said the theater is still on schedule to finish its renovations, which started at front and will work their way back.
Next for the theater are renovations to the front, which include giving the lobby, bathroom and bars a make over. There will even be a café inside The Lyric, which will have regular hours.
“It’s a pretty extensive overhaul,” Bishop said. “The marquee was something we wanted to do initially when we opened 10 years ago.”
The Lyric has occupied four parking spaces in front of theater and four spaces in front of the library.
Back in January 2018, designs showed the new marquee will have exposed vintage-styled LED globe light bulbs like the original Lyric sign had in the 1940s.
The building was first constructed in the late 1800s and was originally a stable for the William Faulkner family in the early part of the 20th century. Since then, it has been transformed into a live-performance theater, a movie theater, an office space, a heath clinic and back to a live-performance theater.