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The Gods Must Be Crazy (1980) was one of the films at the Orson Welles Cinema. The Orson Welles Cinema was a movie theater at 1001 Massachusetts Avenue in Cambridge, Massachusetts that operated from 1969 to 1986. Showcasing independents, foreign films and revivals, it became a focal point of the Boston-Cambridge film community.
The Herongate Square is an unenclosed shopping centre in the Heron Gate neighbourhood of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, at the intersection of Walkley Road and Heron Road. [2] Prior to redevelopment in the mid-2010s, it was the site of the Herongate Mall , a medium-sized mall launched in 1981.
The Brattle Theatre is a repertory movie theater located in Brattle Hall at 40 Brattle Street near Harvard Square in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The theatre is a small movie house with one screen. It is one of the few remaining movie theaters, if not the only one, to use a rear-projection system; the projector is located behind the screen rather ...
Sturbridge Luxury Cinemas, a "dine in" theater with luxury seating and eight big screens, will take over the space once occupied by the 1,210-capacity Sturbridge Cinemagic Stadium Theaters at the ...
The Cambridge Performing Arts Center returns with another sure-to-be smash-hit performance of "Mean Girls.". Based on the 2004 Mark Waters film and book by Tina Fey, the plot revolves around the ...
Scollay Square Olympia Theatre 20th century Scollay Theatre 1913 1962 Tremont Row: Seville Theatre 1930 circa 1970 circa East Boston: Siege of Paris Opera House 1879 [1] Selwyn's Theatre: 1867 1870 Washington Street: Selwyn Theatre 1921 Park Square: Shawmut Theatre 20th century Blue Hill Avenue [3] St. James: 20th century Huntington Avenue [3 ...
Heron Gate [1] or Herongate is a neighbourhood in Alta Vista Ward and Gloucester-Southgate Ward in the south end of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.It is defined by the Herongate Tenant Coalition as being bounded on the north by Heron Road, on the west by Heron-Walkley Park and Albion Road, and by the Walkley rail corridor on the south. [2]
It is a collaboration of two separate theater companies—Underground Railway Theater, founded in 1976 in Oberlin, Ohio, and the Nora Theatre Company, founded in 1988 by Mary C. Huntington. With support from the Boston Foundation Arts Fund, the two companies combined forces and moved into the state-of-the-art Central Square Theater in 2008. [3]