Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
After Sony Music acquired the Columbia catalogues, a newly remastered CD of the original Broadway cast recording was released in 1998, featuring Kert's rendition of "Being Alive" as a bonus track. [90] The original Broadway cast album was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2008.
The plans were prepared by the Milwaukee Building Company (Meyer & Holler), and the total investment was estimated to be in the region of $100,000. [2] The layout of the buildings was described by the Los Angeles Times in 2002 as a "fairy-tale cottage complex." [4] Another writer has described the style as "eccentric Peter Pan architecture." [5]
Pennebaker initially intended the project as a pilot for a television series dedicated to the making-of different cast recordings. His small film crew joined the musical's cast at the Columbia Records 30th Street recording studio on the first Sunday in May 1970, shortly after Company opened on Broadway.
[2] [3] Estimates on the number of Earth's current species range from 10 million to 14 million, [4] with about 1.2 million or 14% documented, the rest not yet described. [5] However, a 2016 report estimates an additional 1 trillion microbial species, with only 0.001% described.
The original 1967 Los Angeles and 1968 Broadway productions ... It was the first Broadway musical to lose a million ... The Original Broadway cast recording was ...
Frieda and her daughter, Petrie Robie ran the building until 1996 when they sold it to Deborah Del Prete and Gigi Pritzker. In 2008 it was sold to Hersel Saeidy [5] and rented to Mark Flanagan, the owner of Los Angeles's Club Largo. Flanagan moved his entire operation to the new location and renamed it Largo at the Coronet. [6]
One Million B.C. is a 1940 American fantasy film produced by Hal Roach Studios and released by United Artists. It is also known by the titles Cave Man , Man and His Mate , and Tumak . [ citation needed ]
The Cameo Theatre is a historic former movie theater on Broadway in Los Angeles, California. Opened by film mogul W. H. Clune as Clune's Broadway Theatre in 1910, it was one of the first purpose-built movie theaters in the United States. It remained the oldest continually operating movie theater in Los Angeles until its closure in 1991.