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In January 2010, theatre reviewer Pollstar revealed that the Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium was the busiest theatre in Canada, selling 146,555 tickets in 2009, beating its twin, the Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium in Calgary (138,515 tickets) and Toronto’s Massey Hall (93,742 tickets). [4]
Katrakio Theatre: Not covered 5,000 Petra Theatre Not covered 4,000 Theater of the Rocks "Melina Merkouri" Not covered 2,800 Piraeus: Veakio Theatre: Not covered 2,000 Israel: Central District: Ra'anana: Ra'anana Amphipark: Not covered 8,300 Mexico: Nuevo León: Monterrey: Auditorio Banamex: 8,000 New Zealand: Hastings: Hawke's Bay: Black Barn ...
The Forum Theatre is a smaller outdoor amphitheatre that seats 240. The Badlands Arts Centre is a 1,310 square meter (14,100 square-foot) building with an additional 836 square meter (9,000 square feet) of dedicated outdoor space that allows indoor events to occur onsite. [ 15 ]
The Edmonton Fringe is a founding member of the Canadian Association of Fringe Festivals. Fringe Theatre is a charitable arts organization, Fringe Theatre brings community together through the power of storytelling. Fringe supports Artists by giving them the tools and platform they need to put on their productions and reach audiences. [2]
The Garneau became Metro Cinema's new home in July 2011, and was officially reopened in September 2011. [2] It was designated a Municipal Historic Resource on October 28, 2009. [3] Designed by noted Edmonton architect William Blakey and built in 1940, the Garneau is the only remaining theatre of the early modernist style and period in Alberta.
The theatre's first production to be performed was Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?. The theatre was founded on October 12, 1965 with its first opening night on November 10, 1965. [ 1 ] In its current location, The Citadel has the distinction of being the only venue where the Jule Styne musical Pieces of Eight has been produced.
Around 1916, outdoor cinemas first arrived in Berlin, Germany. [2] During the 1920s, many "rooftop theatres" converted to cinema use. [citation needed] One example of this was the Loew's New York, located on Times Square. [citation needed] In 1951, National Theater (Manhattan) rooftop theatre re-opened as a cinema. [3]
It also has the St. John's Arts and Culture Centre, with a 1,000 seat main theatre. Clarenville, Newfoundland is the home to The New Curtain Theatre Company, which operates as a year-round professional theatre based out of The Loft Theatre at the White Hills Ski Resort in Clarenville (2 hours west of St. John's).