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Movie City 9070 Dixie Hwy National Theatre (also known as B. F. Keith Theatre) 1913–1952 500 W. Muhammad Ali Boulevard Razed in 1953 [19] New Superba Theatre Razed Norman Movie Theatre Years active 1911 to 1962 2051 Portland Ave. Was previously a vaudeville theatre. Established and run by the Wentzell family of the Portland neighborhood. Oak ...
Actors Theatre of Louisville; The Louisville Palace; CenterStage at the Jewish Community Center, Community Theatre which began in 1914, features Broadway-style musicals, professional children's theatre, and youth musical theatre training. Iroquois Amphitheater; The Kentucky Theater
The center also manages the historic W. L. Lyons Brown Theatre, which opened in 1925 and is patterned after New York's acclaimed Music Box Theatre. Actors Theatre of Louisville is another performing arts center that has become the cornerstone of the revitalization of Louisville's Main Street. As the centerpiece of the city's urban cultural ...
The Brown was completed in 1925, and is modeled on the Music Box Theatre in New York City. Paristown Hall opened in July 2019 and is located in the Paristown Pointe neighborhood east of downtown. It is a standing-only venue with a capacity of 2,000, and features a patio, balcony area, and bars.
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The theatre features an array of popular movies, old and new, as well as concerts by popular artists. Kentucky musicians that have performed at the Palace include: Billy Ray Cyrus in 1994, the Backstreet Boys in 1998 (Brian and Kevin are from Lexington), My Morning Jacket (from Louisville) in 2005, Chris Stapleton in 2015, Sturgill Simpson in ...
Modeled after New York's famous Music Box Theatre, the space boasts a 40' x 40' stage. With the onset of the Great Depression, the Brown was leased to the Fourth Avenue Amusement Company in the 1930s as a movie theater. By 1962 the Brown Theatre was renovated so that it could once again stage live performances.
The theater was renamed the Lincoln in 1939 and continued operating as a movie theater through the 1960s. It also regularly presented musical artists including local star Nancy Wilson, Count Basie, and Cab Calloway. Closed from the early 1970s, the Lincoln was the object of numerous unrealized restoration projects in the following decades.