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Art cinemas, or independent movie theaters, in New York City are known for showing art house, independent, revival, and foreign films. Manhattan. Angelika Film Center;
Mattituck is a hamlet and census-designated place (CDP) in Suffolk County, New York, United States. The population was 4,584 in 2023 according to the World Population Review. [ 2 ] Located in the Town of Southold , Mattituck CDP roughly corresponds to the hamlet by the same name.
The Andrew Gildersleeve Octagonal Building, also known as Mattituck, the Octagon House and Mattituck Octagon House, is an historic octagon house located at Main Road and Love Lane in Mattituck, New York. It was built in 1854 by Andrew Gildersleeve, a master carpenter, who used it for his family home as well as for a store.
The B. S. Moss Broadway Theater showing White Hands in 1922. In the 1930s, Moss decided to focus more on the movie business and phased out his vaudeville program. In 1936, he opened his Criterion Theater in Times Square, which lasted as a successful movie theater until 2000. Since then, Bow Tie Cinemas has continued to concentrate on the ...
The Ziegfeld Theatre was a single-screen movie theater located at 141 West 54th Street in midtown Manhattan in New York City.It opened in 1969 and closed in 2016. The theater was named in honor of the original Ziegfeld Theatre (1927–1966), which was built by the impresario Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.
From 1972 to 1988 the theater was operated by Bernard Goldberg, executive vice-president of Golden Theatre Management, operator of the Quad and six other New York City houses. [5] The theater exhibited Hollywood films , independent films , and revivals of older films, but had difficulty obtaining the most attractive releases due to the ...
The same year, Newsday wrote that the theater was "the architectural king" of art-house movie theaters, characterizing it as "Art Deco restored with a vengeance". [21] Robert A. M. Stern wrote in his 1987 book New York 1930 that the theater was "stylishly Modernist", [ 13 ] while Andrew Dolkart wrote in 2012 that "the Art Deco Midtown has one ...
The Elgin Theater is a former movie theater on the corner of 19th Street and Eighth Avenue in the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. The theater showed films from its opening in 1942 until 1978. Its longtime manager, Ben Barenholtz, invented midnight movie programming for the theater.