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The Kentucky Center, the largest performing arts center in Kentucky, featuring touring plays and performances by the Kentucky Opera and the Louisville Ballet; The Kentucky Shakespeare Festival, presenting free Shakespeare performances every summer in Louisville's Central Park. Actors Theatre of Louisville; The Louisville Palace
The Burnside Historic District, in Burnside, Kentucky, is a 2.7 acres (1.1 ha) historic district containing four contributing buildings which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. [1] It includes Queen Anne architecture and is located around the intersection of Lakeshore Dr. and French Ave. in Burnside. [1]
College Hill is an unincorporated community located in Madison County, Kentucky, United States. Its post office is closed. [2] It was also known as Texas. It is located on Kentucky Route 977 north of Waco. The Cane Springs Primitive Baptist Church on the National Register of Historic Places is located within the community.
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Burnside is a home rule-class city in Pulaski County, Kentucky, United States. The population was 611 at the 2010 census . In 2004, Burnside became the only town in Pulaski County or any adjoining county to allow the sale of alcoholic beverages in qualified establishments.
Actors Theatre of Louisville is a non-profit performing arts theater located in downtown Louisville, Kentucky. Actors Theatre was founded in 1964 following the merging of two local companies, Actors, Inc. and Theatre Louisville, operated by Louisville natives Ewel Cornett and Richard Block. [ 1 ]
Kentucky Shakespeare Festival is a non-profit, professional theatre company in Louisville, Kentucky that produces and performs the works of William Shakespeare. The main productions offered are the annual summer series of plays presented free to the public at the C. Douglass Ramey Amphitheater in the city's Central Park .
The building sat decaying and empty for three decades. Community members pressed for renovation throughout the 1990s. [8] In 1996, the city of Lexington faced a lawsuit from the state of Kentucky for failing to build a downtown cultural center as it had promised. As part of the settlement, the city agreed to renovate the Lyric. [9]