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The Lafayette Theatre was named for Revolutionary War hero Marquis de Lafayette who fought, along with General George Washington, in Suffern and the Town of Ramapo. The theater's history began when the Suffern Amusement Company hired noted theatre architect Eugene De Rosa to design a movie theatre for a location on Lafayette Avenue in downtown ...
Outshining other movie options in town. Long, the historian, said there were plenty of movie options in Suffern in the early 1920's. At the corner of Lafayette and Chestnut, a wooden building ...
Lafayette, Walworth County, Wisconsin Metadata This file contains additional information, probably added from the digital camera or scanner used to create or digitize it.
Town Hall Theatre (Galway), Ireland, an event venue; The Town Hall (New York City), an event venue This page was last edited on 30 December 2019, at 16:54 (UTC). ...
The Lafayette Theatre was a 1,500-seat two-story theater built by banker Meyer Jarmulowsky that opened in November, 1912. [2] Located at 132nd Street and 7th Avenue, it was designed in the Renaissance style by architect Victor Hugo Koehler, who also designed the two three-story buildings flanking the theater on the corners of 131st and 132nd Streets.
The Town Hall Theatre underwent a $5 million renovation from 2005 to 2008. [6] During the renovation, the OCM shifted its performances to the Vergennes Opera House and artist Fran Bull's Brandon studio. [citation needed] The Company returned to the Town Hall Theatre in June 2008 with Puccini's La bohème. [citation needed]
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Shortly before the Town Hall's demolition, La Rose bought the Esquire Theater (at Superior and Jefferson Streets), a move that prompted the city council, at the urging of a group of businessmen on the same block as the Esquire, to ban burlesque in March 1968. [2] She was in the process of remodeling it for live theater. [2]