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The Devil's Disciple (play) 1897: 1901, rev. 1904 1898: The Perfect Wagnerite (music criticism) 1898, rev. 1907 1898: Caesar and Cleopatra (play) 1901: 1901, rev. 1930 1899: Captain Brassbound's Conversion (play) 1900: 1901 1900: Fabianism and The Empire: A Manifesto (ed. Shaw) 1900 1900: Women as councillors (Fabian tract 93)‡ 1900 [3] 1901
Grand Center is the site of numerous arts and entertainment venues including the Fox Theatre, Powell Symphony Hall (home of the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra), the Contemporary Art Museum Saint Louis, the Pulitzer Arts Foundation, the Sheldon Concert Hall, Clyde C. Miller Career Academy, and Jazz St. Louis.
The Sheldon Art Galleries encompass 7,000 square feet (650 m 2) and feature exhibits on photography, architecture, St. Louis artists and collection, music history, emerging artists and children's art. Seasonally changing exhibitions are held each year.
The Muny in 1923. In 1914, Luther Ely Smith began staging pageant-masques on Art Hill in Forest Park. [3] In 1916, a grassy area between two oak trees on the present site of The Muny was chosen for a production of As You Like It produced by Margaret Anglin and starring Sydney Greenstreet with a local cast of "1,000 St. Louis folk dancers and folk singers" [4] in connection with the ...
St. Louis is home to the Fox Theatre, located in Grand Center, which presents Broadway shows and concert or speaking events. Other theaters include The Muny, a summer musical theatre located in Forest Park and founded in 1919; the Repertory Theatre of St. Louis, the city's major regional theatre, founded in 1966; Opera Theatre of Saint Louis, an annual summer opera festival co-founded by ...
“Mean Girls” runs through Sunday at Kravis Center, 701 Okeechobee Blvd., West Palm Beach. For tickets and more information, call 561-832-7469 or visit Kravis.org.
Diamond Jones, Summaeverythang Community Center program director She tells the story of our community, and she makes it into a fantasy world, like Willy Wonka’s Chocolate Factory. But when you ...
The Missouri Botanical Garden is a botanical garden located at 4344 Shaw Boulevard in St. Louis, Missouri. It is also known informally as Shaw's Garden for founder and philanthropist Henry Shaw. Its herbarium, with more than 6.6 million specimens, [3] is the second largest in North America, behind that of the New York Botanical Garden.