Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Summit Playhouse is a theater in Summit, New Jersey and home to one of the oldest continuously operating amateur community theaters in the United States [3] producing a new show each calendar season. [4] In 2011, it presented Meet Me in St. Louis, [5] Closer Than Ever, [6] and Speed the Plow. [3]
Summit Avenue crosses the Union City line at Transfer Station. It is here that it intersects Paterson Plank Road, which runs to the New Jersey Meadowlands. Summit Avenue was the "downtown" of the former municipality of West Hoboken, and is still a busy commercial district. [11] A theater from the period is now the Summit Quadplex cinema. [12]
Stanley Theater (Newark, New Jersey) Strand Theater (Lakewood, New Jersey) U. Union County Performing Arts Center; W. Warner Theatre (Atlantic City, New Jersey)
New Jersey Independent Film Festival (established 2021) (Cranford Theater, Cranford) [43] New Jersey Indian and International Film Festival (established 2018) (Regal Hadley Theater, South Plainfield; Oak Tree Road, Edison) [44] New Jersey Jewish Film Festival (established 2000) (West Orange) [45] [46] New Jersey Young Filmmakers Festival ...
This is a list of movies set or partially set in the U.S. state of New Jersey: 13th Child (2002) - shot in New Jersey at Wharton State Forest, Batsto Village, and Hammonton in the Pine Barrens [1] According to Greta (2009) - Ocean Grove, NJ - Asbury Park, NJ - Brick Township, NJ - Neptune, NJ - Point Pleasant, NJ
The Williams Center is an arts center and cinema complex located in downtown Rutherford, New Jersey. The center was named after the Pulitzer Prize winning poet and physician William Carlos Williams, who had been born and raised in the borough. The building it occupies was originally built in the 1920s as a Vaudeville theater known as the Rivoli ...
Taiwan’s legalization of gay marriage last year helpfully came in time for the real-world launch of the GOL Summit, Asia’s largest LGBTQ+ filmmaking conference. The event, which runs Monday ...
[88] [89] The Loew's Jersey had cost $2 million [21] [90] and was the first movie theater in New Jersey to be developed specifically for sound films. [22] [81] [82] The theater's opening featured performances from local musicians, [91] directed by Don Albert; [92] [93] in addition, the actor George K. Arthur greeted visitors at the opening. [94]