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The Village Nightclub, also known as The Village, is a nightclub and music venue located in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.The club opened Dec 4, 1954. [1]The club since has hosted performances by Blue Öyster Cult, Cheap Trick, Dio, Kansas, Cyndi Lauper, Bruce Springsteen, and other bands and musicians.
In 1988, three years after its opening, the club was relocated to the 200 block of Prince Street with an entrance on Water Street. Circa 1995, the venue was signed on to do a live television show entitled "Live at the Chameleon Club" which aired on PRISM Network, a now defunct Philadelphia area cable network.
The Ware Center features several state-of-the-art venues for live theater and concerts, as well as conferences, meetings, and art exhibits. [ 17 ] Steinman Hall - a 350-seat concert hall, with acoustics designed by Cyril M. Harris , an award-winning acoustician who designed over 100 concert halls around the world, including the Lincoln Center ...
Rooftop pop-up bar opens for summer at historic Oppenheim Building. Tribune. Gabrielle Lang, The Times Leader, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. June 13, 2024 at 9:19 PM ... The Roof at Oppenheim plans to host ...
Pages in category "Music venues in Pennsylvania" The following 19 pages are in this category, out of 19 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B.
The Sharks, with members Shea Quinn, Sam Lugar, Doug Phillips, Mark Showers and Steve Zero, had reunited yearly at The Village Nightclub in Lancaster, Pennsylvania for reunion concerts until 2021. Dave Sheaffer (original bass player) is a retired music teacher for the ELCO Middle school and Girke has been an active blues performer since 1990.
The 1959 production of Our Town, starring Jeanne Clemson, marked the first time that a live theater production had been performed at the Fulton Opera House in thirty years. [14] In 1962, the Fulton Opera House Foundation was formed, and funds were raised to purchase the building as a nonprofit in the hopes of raising money so that it could be ...
The Lancaster Symphony Orchestra made its official debut on May 1, 1947, at McCaskey High School Auditorium (Lancaster, Pennsylvania) under the baton of Conductor Louis Vyner. Ticket prices ranged from $1.20 to $2.40 per person. The concert earned several standing ovations and the entire affair earned a profit of $236.