Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Normal Theater, also known as the Normal Theatre, is a cinema located in the downtown area of Normal, Illinois of the United States of America, which is located in McLean County. The theater closed for a time in the early 1990s but reopened in 1993 after being purchased and renovated by the town of Normal.
Normal Theater. Normal Theater opened in 1937 and was the first theater in Bloomington-Normal built specifically for sound films. The strong art-deco design was, at the time, very avant-garde for a small Illinois town. The Normal Theater has been completely restored to its original condition.
Normal Theater [5] 209 North Street 1937 November 04, 1991 July 25, 1997 Sprague's Super Service [6] 305 E. Pine Street 1930-1931 August 15, 2011 April 25, 2008 John Gregory House [7] 607 N. Main Street 1860s April 15, 1991 Orson Leroy Manchester House [8] 705 S. Broadway Avenue 1916 November 20, 1995 Fairview Sanitorium [9] 905 N. Main Street 1919
The Little Theatre of Fall River will present their production of Larry Kramer’s “The Normal Heart” from Aug. 15 to Aug. 25, with performances held on Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays.
The Normal Heart received its Polish premiere in 1987 at the Polish Theatre in Poznań where it was directed by Grzegorz Mrówczyński . [6] The Polish cast included Mariusz Puchalski as Ned Weeks and Mariusz Sabiniewicz as Tommy Boatwright, with Andrzej Szczytko as Bruce Niles and Irena Grzonka as Dr. Emma Brookner. [7]
You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work; to remix – to adapt the work; Under the following conditions: attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made.
Image credits: Laura Gustafson #5. We had a couch in the living room. But the living room was carpeted so I was not allowed to walk on the carpet. And thus I was not allowed to sit on the couch.
Next to Normal began as a ten-minute-long piece called Feeling Electric, which recent college graduates Yorkey and Kitt wrote as a final project for the BMI Musical Theatre Workshop at the end of the 1990s. [12] Their inspiration was a segment about electroconvulsive therapy Yorkey saw on Dateline NBC. [13]