Harmony Performing Arts Center Prepares to Open in Watertown

Watertown, NY will soon be home to a new music venue, the Harmony Performing Arts Center.

Joseph Foy, president and founder of HarmoNNY Performing Arts Community started this organization back in 2020 with the goal of creating a music-focused performance venue in the local area. Foy, a long-time musician himself, wanted to expand beyond typical small-town bar gigs and create a space where music could be the full focus. 

“Sometimes it would be nice to just be able to play my songs in an environment where people are listening and I can try to create a show out of it,” Foy said. “There wasn’t really a place where I felt like I could really do that here.”

Harmony Performing Arts Center
The Historic Strand Theater, Photo by Cinema Treasures

Since then, Foy’s idea has expanded to encompass all types of performing arts, from the theater to dance and comedy.

The Harmony Performing Arts Center is currently undergoing renovation and is set to be open this fall. The venue is located in the historic Strand Theater, a former silent theater turned nightclub, dating back to the early 1900s. The Strand closed its doors in 2018 and was left in the hands of a local non-profit Neighbors of Watertown, which eventually reached out to Foy to create a performing arts space.

Harmony Performing Arts Center
The Strand Theater, 1987 article in the Watertown Daily Times announcing its re-opening as a nightclub.  Photo: Watertown Daily Times.  

The theater will seat 100 people and feature a rooftop area for additional events. Jefferson Community College will also share office space next door, a partnership that helped Harmony gain additional grant funding to renovate the space.

Foy said he took inspiration for Harmony from other small town theaters such as the Homer Center for the Arts located in Central New York as well as Auburn Public Theater. Both have non-profit models, as does Harmony.

“I thought to myself, in Watertown, we didn’t necessarily have anything that was specific to the performing arts,” Foy said. “We feel like in Watertown … people aren’t going out as much to see things anymore, in general, so us starting with a smaller venue makes a lot of sense in our mind to help build up that momentum again.”

Harmony Performing Arts Center
Construction in the interior of the soon-to-be Harmony Performing Arts Center – Photo via Downtown News and Glenn Curry

For the past three years, Foy has worked with the local community to improve access to the arts. Harmony currently operates an instrumental lending library where local residents can rent instruments and musical equipment like mics and PA systems. More recently, Harmony partnered with the North County Library system allowing them to deliver instruments across multiple counties.

“The way I see it, you know, you start off small, and then you make it work, and then you build other things into it,” Foy said.

Foy started this program during the pandemic, when finding a theater and doing renovations would have been next to impossible.

“We’ve been doing things, just anything we can think of that helps enhance the arts, whether it be just having a calendar that shows what’s going on in the area each day, to having lists of the performers who are in the area, or the those who are teaching lessons in the area,” Foy said.

Harmony Performing Arts Center
The outside of the theater as it undergoes renovations – Photo courtesy Joeseph Foy

Foy said he plans to keep growing the Harmony Performing Arts Center community well into the future.

“My real vision is to go down the line – and maybe this is 10-20, years from now – to create a bigger venue, but we’re so excited to be able to start with something that we can build up from, and that’s not going to be too much for us to take on.”

There is no official opening date or performances scheduled yet for Harmony Performing Arts Center although Foy hopes renovations will be done by this fall. He added Harmony is always looking for new members, volunteers and instrument donations.

“Just to see that momentum from the community is really fulfilling and exciting,” Foy said.

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