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The theater in 1973. The Trocadero was a burlesque theater from the early 1900s until the 1970s. Burlesque performer Mara Gaye performed here in the 1950s. The Pennsylvania Opera Theater, in 1982, was presenting three productions a year at the Trocadero. [4] In 1986, the Trocadero was again remodeled for its current use as a concert hall and ...
After several days of rumors and a last-minute attempt by local promoters to save it, Philadelphia’s Trocadero Theatre — part of the city’s entertainment skyline since 1870 — is closing at ...
The Pennsylvania Opera Theater gave the world premiere in a concert version at the Philadelphia College of the Performing Arts's Theatre 313 [b] on November 19, 1980. [c] [2] The same company presented the first staged version at Philadelphia's Trocadero Theatre on May 6, 1983. [3] Both versions received favorable reviews.
Plays and Players Theatre - plays, musicals; Prince Music Theater - various; Susquehanna Bank Center in Camden, New Jersey - popular music; Suzanne Roberts Theatre - plays, musicals; The TLA (formerly the Theater of the Living Arts) - popular music; Tower Theater in Upper Darby Township - popular music; Trocadero Theatre - popular musical acts
Arch Street Opera House (NRHP added 1978 — Building — #78002442), now known as the Trocadero Theatre, 1003–1005 Arch St. (later modified by George W. Plowman and others). Church of the Gesú and school. It is a contributing building to the Girard Avenue Historic District. Monument to the Signers of the Declaration of Independence (1860).
Royal Theater (Philadelphia) T. Tacony Music Hall; Trocadero Theatre; U. Uptown Theater (Philadelphia)
Sydney Trocadero, a dance and concert hall opened in 1936 in New South Wales, Australia; Trocadero Ballroom (1917–1975), at Elitch Gardens, Denver, Colorado, U.S. Trocadero Hotel (Bangkok), a former hotel on Surawong Road in Bangkok; Trocadero Theatre, a historic theater in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
In 1967, a dispute with the board of directors resulted in Gregory leaving the theatre on February 17, 1967. [7] At that time, the theatre was taken over by a new firm and christened as the "Bandbox Living Arts", a beatnik house; [4] however, the theatre saw a decline in popularity and closed in 1969 due to financial issues. [8]