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Lucerna Palace (Czech: Palác Lucerna) is an entertainment and shopping complex in the New Town quarter of Prague, Czech Republic. In 2017, it was named a national cultural monument. In 2017, it was named a national cultural monument.
Lucerna Music Bar was the site of the Václav Havel Tribute Concert held in the former president's honor, upon his death in 2011. [ 2 ] Today, the venue holds discos on Friday and Saturday nights, and during the week, it mainly hosts live music.
The first mobile cinematographs appear edin Brno in 1896 and the first permanent cinema opened in 1907. However, the current University Cinema Scala only opened about 20 years later, when there were already a number of other cinemas in the city: Centrál (the first cinema, that opened in 1907), Edison (1908), Varieté (later turned into the Divadlo Radost theatre), Oránia (1911), Lidový ...
8:10 pm - Jasná Páka and Hudba Praha; 8:40 pm - Radim Hladík and Vladimír Mišík; 8:50 pm - Štěpán Rak; 8:55 pm - Živé kvety 9:15 pm - Tonya Graves , Matěj Ruppert and Ondřej Brousek 9:30 pm - Hradišťan (Jiří Pavlica ) 9:45 pm - Suzanne Vega; 9:50 pm - Ivan Král and Jan Ponocný
The Reduta Theatre (Czech: Divadlo Reduta) is a theatre in Brno, Czech Republic. It was built on the city's oldest square and began its life in Renaissance times as the Taverna (Tavern) Theatre. In 1767, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart performed with his sister in a concert there. It is now part of the National Theatre in Brno.
Lucerna may refer to: Lucerna, Ocotepeque, a municipality in Honduras; Lucerne, a city in Switzerland; Lucerna (cattle) Lucerna, a genus of snails in the family ...
Lucerne Festival. Lucerne Festival is one of the leading international festivals in the world of classical music and presents a series of classical music festivals based in Lucerne, Switzerland.
The Za Lužánkami Stadium (Czech: Stadion Za Lužánkami) is a closed stadium in Brno, Czech Republic. It was primarily used for football, and was the home ground of FC Zbrojovka Brno. It held up to 50,000 people. The stadium was constructed between 1949 and 1953 and was the biggest stadium in Czechoslovakia during the 1960s and 1970s. [1]