Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The venue was completed and a dedication ceremony was held on December 15, 2006 as a joint venture with the City of Peoria and the theater company, Theater Works, who operates the building. [1] [2] The center would not officially open until February 2007 after Theater Works had moved in. [3] Received Best New Playhouse in 2008 by Phoenix New ...
The theatre opened in 1920 as a silent picture and vaudeville venue. [6] It had 1,600 seats. [6] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on November 21, 1980. The Madison Theatre closed in the 1980s. It reopened as a comedy club and then again in 1992 as a dinner theatre. [6]
Peoria Civic Center is an entertainment complex located in downtown Peoria, Illinois. Designed by Pritzker Prize winning architect Philip Johnson [3] and John Burgee, [4] it has an arena, theater, exhibit hall and meeting rooms. [5] It opened in 1982 [6] and completed an expansion to its lobby and meeting facilities in 2007. [7]
The theater was originally listed for $8.5 million. Blickenstaff spent $5 million renovating the 100-year-old building he purchased in 2019, transforming it into an 800-seat theater equipped with ...
Address: 123 Par 3 Lane, East Peoria (in VFW Post 2078 Park off Springfield Road). Hours: 5 to 9 p.m. Sunday through Thursday; 5 to 11 p.m. Friday and Saturday; and 5 to 9 p.m. Dec. 24-Jan. 2.
This theater near Baltimore claims it has the largest theater screen in the nation, measuring an astonishing 6,240 square feet and now charges like it — admission is $12.50 per adult and $7 for ...
Pride and Prejudice is a musical by Bernard J. Taylor based on Jane Austen's 1813 novel Pride and Prejudice.It was first produced as a concept studio recording in London, England, with singers including Peter Karrie, Claire Moore, Christopher Biggins, and others.
Don Marine, professor of theatre at Illinois Central College (East Peoria), commented: If one were to choose the city in the United States most victimized in jokes and anecdotes by theatrical personalities, the selection of Peoria, Illinois, would be a popular, if not likely choice. Two of the more popular quips are: "Say, I hear you got married.