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The Strand Ballroom & Theatre [2] (formerly the Paramount Theatre, Strand Theatre, Lupo's Heartbreak Hotel and commonly The Strand) is a live music venue located in downtown Providence, Rhode Island. The theatre opened in 1915 as a vaudeville theatre and later became a cinema and concert venue.
The Providence Performing Arts Center (PPAC), formerly Loew's State Theatre and Palace Concert Theater, is a multi-use not-for-profit theater located at 220 Weybosset Street in downtown Providence, Rhode Island. It was built in 1928 as a movie palace by the Loews Theatres chain to designs by Rapp & Rapp, the leading designers of music palaces ...
The Rhode Island Philharmonic Orchestra holds several concerts at The VETS each year. In addition, The VETS hosts a broad range of events each season, offering a variety of performances, rehearsals, exhibitions, concerts, educational events, meetings, and other special events. Since 1950, when the theater opened, it began to fall into disrepair.
Nas with the Rhode Island Philharmonic Orchestra, July 20, 8 p.m., Providence Performing Arts Center . This Grammy Award-winning East Coast hip-hop legend, considered one of the genre’s best ...
Newport Classical Music Festival: July 4-21, Newport, Rhode Island Levitate Music Festival , July 5-7, Marshfield, Massachusetts Newport Folk Festival : July 26-28, Newport, Rhode Island
Bold Point is now a public park, Bold Point Park, owned by the City of East Providence. It is home to a boat launch and fishing area. In 2017, the City leased the area to Live Nation and RI Waterfront Events to hold concerts there, starting in summer 2017. [7] It is the state's largest outdoor concert venue, with the capacity for about 4,000 ...
Performing arts centers in Rhode Island (3 P) M. Music venues in Rhode Island (8 P) This page was last edited on 27 August 2021, at 14:23 (UTC). Text ...
The George V. Meehan Auditorium is a 3,059-seat hockey arena, in Providence, Rhode Island.The arena opened in 1961 and was dedicated on January 6, 1962. It is named for George V. Meehan, the benefactor of the arena, which he hoped would "service and promote" the Brown Bears ice hockey program, which now belongs to the Ivy and ECAC Hockey leagues.