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The Little Theatre, commonly known as The Little, is a movie theatre located on East Avenue in downtown Rochester, New York, and a non-profit multiplex specializing in art film, including independent and foreign productions outside the United States.
The Little Theatre Movement served to oppose Hollywood and the film industry; they dismissed Hollywood's mass production and creation of films to appeal to the largest possible audience. [31] The Little Theatre Movement's focus was on creating fine art, focused not on commercial purposes, but rather, on artistic, historical, or political content.
The Hayes Theater (formerly the Little Theatre, New York Times Hall, Winthrop Ames Theatre, and Helen Hayes Theatre) is a Broadway theater at 240 West 44th Street in the Theater District of Midtown Manhattan in New York City.
After “Jesus Christ Superstar,” Little Theatre will present “Peace, Love, and Music,” a tribute to the music of the 1960s. Performances will be on May 17 and 18 at The Firebarn, 340 ...
Little Theatre Movement, in America during the early 20th century; By state and city. Phoenix Little Theatre, the original name of the Phoenix Theatre, Arizona; Little Theater, at the UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television, Los Angeles, California
A theater company formed in 1912, the Chicago Little Theatre spearheaded and lent its name [1] to a historic, popular wave in American Theater, the Little Theatre Movement. Founded in its namesake city by Ellen Van Volkenburg and Maurice Browne , the company was an art theater formed in opposition to the commercial values which held sway at the ...
The Little Theatre of Alexandria is a community theatre located at 600 Wolfe Street in Alexandria, Virginia. It was founded by Mary Lindsey in 1934 and was originally ...
Before the theatre opened, it had been rumored around Hollywood as on its way, a natural extension of a national trend called the little theatre movement. [4] It was likely inspired by the enormous success of the Hollywood Community Theater (1917–1922), founded by noted drama teacher Neely Dickson, that no longer had a permanent building after losing its lease.