Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Riverview's lobby, largely unchanged since 1956. The Riverview is located in Minneapolis's Howe neighborhood and seats 700 patrons. [4] Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, the theater typically played second-run films for between $2–3 per ticket and its concessions were also "much cheaper than at the suburban multiplexes". [14]
Minnesota Theatre : From Old Fort Snelling to the Guthrie. Pogo Press. ISBN 0-9617767-2-2. Zeigler, Joseph Wesley (1973). Regional Theatre : The Revolutionary Stage. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 0-8166-0675-7. Petrie, Carolyn (October 19, 1997). "Long Live the Theater: Here's how the strong survived.
The Trylon Cinema (formerly Trylon microcinema) is a 90-seat movie theater in the Longfellow neighborhood of Minneapolis, Minnesota. The cinema was founded and is currently run by Take-Up Productions, a group of volunteers who got their start at the Oak Street Cinema before establishing the Trylon in 2009 within a former warehouse. A 2017 ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Riverview Theater; T. Terrace Theatre (Minnesota) Trylon Cinema; U. Unique Theater; Uptown Theater (Minneapolis) This page was ...
370 (Laurence Theatre) 1953 West Auditorium: 1,918 June 13, 1990 Carlson Center: Fairbanks: 6,539 unknown Hering Auditorium 1,200 Borealis Theatre: Palmer: 5,000 Arizona; 2010s Anderson Auto Group Fieldhouse Bullhead City: 6,750 unknown Rawhide Event Center: Chandler: 6,000 1989 Chandler Center for the Arts: 1,508 (Mainstage Theater) 346 (Hal ...
The Minnesota Hotel, which stood at Washington and Second Avenues in Minneapolis from 1924 to 1963, was an early L&K project. [7] Many other commercial designs followed, including several hospitals throughout the state; among them were St. Olaf Hospital in Austin (1939, 1954–55), Mount Sinai Hospital in Minneapolis (1951), and a portion of North Memorial Hospital in Robbinsdale (1962), as ...
The theater was founded by John Clark Donahue along with John Burton Davidson, Shirley Diercks, Martha Pierce Boesing and Beth Leinerson. Jon Cranny served as the theater's second artistic director from 1984 [2] until 1997, when Peter C. Brosius became the theater's third artistic director alongside the theater's managing directors: Theresa Eyring (1999–2007), Gabriella Callichio (2007–11 ...