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Mondavi Center opened on October 3, 2002, for the UC Davis Symphony Orchestra and today serves as a venue for musical concerts, theater, dance, lecturers and other entertainers. [1] The façade is a large glass-panelled lobby that is surrounded by sandstone that also lines the interior walls.
The Grammy Museum, located in downtown Los Angeles's L.A. Live, opened in December 2008 corresponding to the Grammy Awards' 50th anniversary. The museum consists of four floors, including historical music artifacts displays, interactive instrument stations and recording booths, and a 200-seat Clive Davis Theater.
The Tower Theater, in Fresno's Tower District. The Warnors Theater in Downtown Fresno built in 1928. The Azteca Theater in Fresno's Chinatown. [1] In Los Angeles County: The Los Angeles Music Center, in Los Angeles, containing multiple pavilions. In Monterey County: The Forest Theater, in Carmel-by-the-Sea, contains multiple venues.
Davis Building was built in either 1914 [1] [2] or 1925. [3] Built of brick, the building features a simplified Beaux Arts Vernacular style, contains a stringcourse separating the first and second stories, upper story windows grouped in twos and threes, and is capped by a heavy classical cornice supported by scroll brackets.
The pavilion is the signature feature of the H Street Theatre Project, which renovated almost the entire block. The stage is a theatre in the round and has a 32-foot (9.8 m) diameter. The theatre seats up to 2,200 guests with a total of 53,000 square feet (4,900 m 2). The pavilion is home for the Sacramento Music Circus, a summer-stock theatre.
Louise M. Davies Symphony Hall is the concert hall component of the San Francisco War Memorial and Performing Arts Center in San Francisco, California. The 2,743-seat hall was completed in 1980 at a cost of US$28 million to give the San Francisco Symphony a permanent home. [1]
Davis is the most populous city in Yolo County, California, United States.Located in the Sacramento Valley region of Northern California, the city had a population of 66,850 in 2020, [11] not including the on-campus population of the University of California, Davis, which was over 9,400 (not including students' families) in 2016. [12]
The Lido Theater (also spelled Lido Theatre) is a historic single-screen movie theater in Newport Beach, California. The Lido Theater opened in October 1939 and was designed by Clifford A. Balch in the Art Deco architectural style. Edwards Theatres, Regency Theatres, and Laemmle Theatres previously operated the facility.