One of Broadway’s oldest surviving theaters is now its youngest.

When the Hudson Theater reopens on Saturday, Feb. 11 — with Jake Gyllenhaal adding star power to the revival of “Sunday in the Park With George” — it becomes Broadway’s 41st and newest playhouse, 114 years after it became one of Broadway’s first. (It opened with a production of “Cousin Kate” starring Ethel Barrymore.) Located on 44th Street just east of Broadway, the ornate theater has led a life as various as Manhattan itself, with stints as a TV studio (1950s), a reborn legit theater and then a porn palace (’60s), a rock venue (’80s), and, for the last 20 years, an event space for Millennium Hotels.

Then there was the Andy Warhol moment, coinciding with his 1967 movie “Bike Boy.” As The New York Times put it in a review: “It opened yesterday at the Hudson Theater. It belongs in the Hudson River.”

Today, however, after a renovation by the Ambassador Theater Group of Britain that was estimated to run $10 million before it started, the Hudson is ready to be a showplace again, and in turn to become that New York rarity: a new Broadway house. (Ambassador officials declined to provide the final cost.)

“The charm and the beauty, historically and architecturally, that has been sitting there still shines today,” said Eric Paris, the theater’s general manager.