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The centre hosts a broad programme of events including cinema screenings and a variety of live performances, from dance and drama to jazz and world music. Taliesin Arts Centre provides a service to both students and the people of Swansea and acts as a regional centre.
Swansea Grand Theatre has a 1,014-seat auditorium and variety of smaller studios and rooms. [4] The Arts Wing is the most recent development at the theatre, a space to host exhibitions, conferences and smaller-scale music and drama performances. [ 5 ]
These are a few of the places of worship in Swansea, many of them in the city centre: Cathedral Church of Saint Joseph, Greenhill (Roman Catholic) City Church Swansea Dyfatty St SA1 1QQ (Pentecostal) Dharmavajra Buddhist Centre, Uplands Ebenezer Baptist Church (Evangelical) High Street Unitarian Church, Swansea (Unitarianism)
University of Colorado Boulder Events Center [fn 29] 5 September 1986 Houston: Cullen Performance Hall [fn 29] 6 September 1986 Dallas: Bronco Bowl [fn 29] 8 September 1986 New Orleans: McAlister Auditorium, Tulane University [fn 29] 10 September 1986 St. Petersburg: Bayfront Arena [fn 29] 13 October 1986 Carlisle United Kingdom Sands Centre ...
Swansea City Opera has fifty performers and performs its repertoire in three different versions depending on the size of the venue. [1] In the smallest possible venues the number of performers reduces to fifteen. The Swansea City Opera's home venue is the Swansea Grand Theatre. The company's repertoire has included: Cosi fan tutte,
BBC Radio Cymru 2 began broadcasting at 6.30am on 29 January 2018, initially offering a separate daily breakfast show. [ 3 ] The service was later expanded to carry regular additional sports commentaries - particularly on football and rugby - on midweek nights and at weekends, as well as occasional music-led special programming.
Originally built in 1888 as a traditional music hall, the building was known as The Pavilion from 1883 to 1892, The Empire from 1892 to 1900, and then as The Palace in 1900 after a takeover by William Coutts, who also operated the city's Shaftesbury Hall, which was known as Swansea's "home of dancing" at the time. [4]
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