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The Grand Opera House, also known as The Grand or Masonic Hall and Grand Theater, is a 1,208-seat theater for the performing arts in Wilmington, Delaware, United States. The four-story building was built in 1871 by the Delaware Grand Lodge of Masons to serve as a Masonic Temple and auditorium. The construction cost was $100,000. [3]
Alphabetical by state, then city. Grand Opera House (Los Angeles), California Grand Opera House (San Francisco), California Grand Opera House (Pueblo, Colorado), designed by Adler & Sullivan
The Grand Opera House, often called The Grand and originally known as the Academy of Music, is a historic opera house located in Macon, Georgia, United States. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1970, it is now the performing arts center of Mercer University .
It reopened in 1880 as the Grand Opera House; now under the management of Harry L. Hamlin who ran the theatre for the next 32 years under that name. Under his tenure the venue became a respectable theatre which featured mainly performances of light operas and musical comedies; although some plays were also performed. [1]
The sisters' are now preparing for their next big gig - Future Talent, which showcases a number of up-and-coming young talent across the island of Ireland - in Belfast's Grand Opera House next ...
As of March 20, 2011, the live feed of the concert was the 21st most viewed event in the Musicians Channel on YouTube. [10] [11] The live stream of the Grand Finale concert at the Sydney Opera House was the largest live stream YouTube ever made, connecting 30.7 million streams on computers and a further 2.8 million streams on mobile devices ...
Grand Opera House, originally Child's Opera House, also known as Grand Theater, Orpheum Theatre, Clune's Grand, and Teatro Mexico, was a theater located in downtown Los Angeles. It was the first home of the Orpheum Circuit in Los Angeles and also the first theater in Los Angeles to exhibit Thomas Edison 's motion picture technology.
The show then toured nationally, and returned to Broadway for 8 more performances at the Grand Opera House which began on October 26, 1903. [1] The production was directed by Frank Smithson and produced by Daniel V. Arthur. [3] It used sets designed by Gates and Morange and costumes by Caroline Seidle. [1]