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The Orpheum Theatre, formerly Player's Theatre, is a 299-seat off-Broadway theatre on Second Avenue near the corner of St. Marks Place in the East Village neighborhood of lower Manhattan, New York City. The theatre is owned by Liberty Theatres, a subsidiary of Reading International, which also owns Minetta Lane Theatre. [1]
Theatre 80 was an Off-Broadway theater located at 80 St. Mark's Place in the East Village neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. It was owned and operated by Lorcan Otway, who restored and renovated the building with his father and opened it as a theater in the 1960s.
Downtown Las Vegas Event Center 11,000 March 15, 2014 [18] Laughlin Event Center Laughlin: 9,000 [19] 2015 Amphitheater at Craig Ranch: North Las Vegas: 6,800 June 24, 2006 The Venetian Theatre: Paradise [a] 1,815 March 2, 1999 House of Blues: 2,000 March 17, 2007 Pearl Concert Theater: 2,400 March 8, 2014 [20] Brooklyn Bowl: 3,000 March 25, 2003
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Abduction (2011 film) Above the Shadows; The Adventures of Sebastian Cole; The Age of Love (2014 film) The Albany Night Boat; Alice in Wonderland (1976 film) All at Once (2016 film) All Good Things (film) All Too Well: The Short Film; Along Came Polly; The Alphabet Killer; America (1924 film) American Animals; American Hustle; American Matchmaker
Beck eventually resigned from the Orpheum in 1923 to become involved with a theater in New York. After his departure Heiman was elected president. Heiman realized that movies were capturing a larger audience and began to give more priority and top billing to featured films rather than live acts in the Orpheum theaters.
Union Square Theatre was the name of two different theatres near Union Square, Manhattan, New York City. The first was a Broadway theatre that opened in 1870, was converted into a cinema in 1921 and closed in 1936. [1] The second was an Off-Broadway theatre that opened in 1985 and closed in 2016.
In 1908, the Orpheum Theater was built by John Cooper Davis. It was a center for movies, basketball, vaudeville acts and roller skating. Lucille Ball, and Burns and Allen performed at the Orpheum. [12] In 1906, Poultney Bigelow, editor and co-owner of the New York Evening Post, built Bigelow Hall in Malden. In April 1910, the Esopus Creek ...