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The Metropolitan Opera House (also known as The Met) is an opera house located on Broadway at Lincoln Square on the Upper West Side of Manhattan in New York City. Part of Lincoln Center, the theater was designed by Wallace K. Harrison. It opened in 1966, replacing the original 1883 Metropolitan Opera House at Broadway and 39th
The Met's first production at the renamed theater was on December 13, 1910. The Met performed regularly at the MOH for the next decade, giving well over a hundred performances at the house. The Metropolitan Opera's last performance at the MOH was Eugene Onegin on April 20, 1920, with Giuseppe de Luca in the title role and Claudia Muzio as ...
The Metropolitan Opera is an American opera company based in New York City, currently resident at the Metropolitan Opera House at Lincoln Center, situated on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. Referred to colloquially as "the Met" [a], the company is operated by the non-profit Metropolitan Opera Association, with Peter Gelb as the general ...
The Metropolitan Opera Gala 1991 was a four-hour concert staged by the Metropolitan Opera on 23 September 1991 to celebrate the 25th anniversary of its opening night in its second home at Lincoln Center. It was televised by Cablevision, and issued by Deutsche Grammophon on Laserdisc and VHS videocassette in 1992 and on DVD in 2010.
The Metropolitan Entertainment Centre (also known as the Met Entertainment Centre or simply The Met)—formerly the Metropolitan Theatre—is a Canadian theatre in downtown Winnipeg, Manitoba, designed by American architect C. Howard Crane.
Metropolitan Opera House (Philadelphia), or The Met, a theater in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Metropolitan Theatre (Cleveland, Ohio) or Agora Theatre and Ballroom; Metropolitan Theatre (Morgantown, West Virginia) Metropolitan Theatres, a southern California movie theater chain; Wang Theatre, formerly the Metropolitan Theatre, in Boston ...
The Metropolitan Theatre was designed in the Spanish colonial revival style by the Reid Brothers (James Reid and Merritt Reid). [4] [2] [5] It opened on April 23, 1924 as a second run theater, by Samuel H. Levin of San Francisco Theatres Inc., who also owned the Alexandria and Coliseum theaters in San Francisco. [4]
Dorrance H. Hamilton Roof Garden located above the Perelman Theater. SEI Innovation Studio, a 2,688-square-foot (249.7 m 2) black box theater located on the lower levels of the Kimmel Center. [10] Smaller performance spaces and meeting rooms.