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Ticket counters of the New York City booth as seen from 47th Street. The TKTS ticket booths in New York City and London sell Broadway and Off-Broadway shows and dance events and West End theatre tickets, respectively, at discounts of 20–50% off the face value. [1] It is owned by the Theatre Development Fund, a non-profit.
The average ticket price (ATP) is the average cost to purchase a film ticket at the box office in any given year. According to the UNESCO Institute for Statistics , the ATP is "calculated as the total revenues generated from tickets sales divided by the number of feature film tickets sold during the year of reference."
Telephone booth, a small structure furnished with a payphone; Box office or ticket booth, a place where admission tickets are sold; Tollbooth, a place on a toll road where an authority collects a fee for use; Food booth, a structure from which food is sold; Control booth, the area of the theater designated for the operation of technical equipment
[6] [7] TDF has two TKTS discount ticket booths in New York City, the original in Times Square and another at Lincoln Center. [8] There are booths in London and Tokyo that license the TKTS trademark, but the organizations are otherwise unrelated. Starting in 1972, TDF added Off-off-Broadway productions to its offerings.
The overlapping letters "G", "C", and "T" are sculpted into multiple places in the Main Concourse and terminal, including in friezes atop several windows above the terminal's ticket office. The symbol was designed with the "T" resembling an upside-down anchor, intended as a reference to Cornelius Vanderbilt's commercial beginnings in shipping ...
In addition to its poor reviews, the film was vilified for its portrayal of "The Torch" robbing a ticket booth by running a rubber tube around the bulletproof partition and dousing the attendant with a flammable liquid, then threatening to set them on fire. Seven similar crimes were repeated in real life during the film's release, although ...
The ticket prominently displays the location (or exit number) from which it was issued [1] and may contain a precomputed chart of toll rates for each exit. Upon arrival at the toll booth at the destination exit, the user presents the ticket to the toll collector, who determines the correct toll. [ 1 ]
A Ticket office can refer to: An office where passengers can buy airline, bus or train tickets; A box office where tickets are sold for admission to events;