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On October 19, 2022, it was announced that Dick's would be relocating to the former Tops Friendly Market in the city of Ithaca. [15] On January 19, 2023, it was announced that Regal Cinemas would close as part of a plan to close 39 theaters nationwide on February 15, 2023, [16] but the theater has since stayed open past that date.
Kitchen Theatre Company was created in 1991. KTC resided at the Clinton House from 1995 to 2009. In 2010, Kitchen Theatre Company (KTC) moved to 417 W. Martin Luther King, Jr. Street, making history by becoming the first theater company in Ithaca to own its own location.
A Regal Cinemas (with a built-in IMAX theater) in New Rochelle, New York, a suburb of New York City. Regal Cinemas was established in 1989 in Knoxville, Tennessee, with Mike Campbell as CEO. Its first location was the Searstown Cinema in Titusville, Florida. [7] Regal began to grow at a rapid pace, opening larger cinemas in suburban areas.
Ithaca-born filmmaker Sarah Nixon has been on trips back and forth from Ithaca to Los Angeles since she graduated from Cornell University in 2018, pouring her flesh and blood into a feature film ...
The chain consists at present of 25 theaters with 147 screens. Most of the theaters are located in Michigan with 10 locations, especially in the Flint/Tri-Cities region and the Greater Lansing area. [1] The group also operates in Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, New York State, North and South Carolina and Tennessee.
Edwards Theatres is an American movie theater brand owned and operated as an in-name-only unit of Cineworld through its Regal Cinemas chain. Originally founded in 1930 by William James Edwards Jr., it operated independently as a major theater chain in the Southern California region until it was consolidated with Regal Cinemas and United Artists Theatres into the Regal Entertainment Group (REG ...
Chelsea Theater Center, founded in 1965 by Robert Kalfin, later closed; The Flea Theater; Hippodrome Theatre (1905–1939) New York City Center; New York Theatre Workshop; Theater for the New City; Theatre on Nassau Street (1732–1753) The Town Hall; In Rochester. Eastman Theatre; Geva Theatre Center; In Syracuse. John D. Archbold Theatre; In ...
Strand Theatre was a historic theater located at Ithaca in Tompkins County, New York. It was built in 1916–1917 in the Tudor Revival style. After Ithaca's Lyceum Theater closed in 1927, the Strand became Ithaca's main venue for touring theater companies. [2] After 1950, the theater switched to showing only films. [2]