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The Orpheum Theatre is a live performance and musical theater built in the 1920s as a movie palace in downtown Madison, Wisconsin, located one block from the Wisconsin State Capitol. In 2008 the Orpheum was added to the National Register of Historic Places as Madison's best surviving representative of the movie palace era. [2]
Pages in category "1927 establishments in Wisconsin" ... Oriental Theatre (Milwaukee) Orpheum Theatre (Madison, Wisconsin) R. Racine Scouts Drum and Bugle Corps;
A newspaper ad promoting the Majestic's vaudeville acts during its opening week in 1906. The Majestic Theatre was founded by Edward F. Biederstaedt (1865–1912) and his brother Otto, sons of Williamson Street grocer Charles Biederstaedt, [1] whose German ancestors helped establish the Catholic church in Madison.
The Orpheum Theatre, 842 S. Broadway, 4th and final venue in Los Angeles, California (1926) The Orpheum Theatre, Madison, Wisconsin (1926) The Orpheum Theater, Omaha, Nebraska (1927) The Orpheum Theatre, Galesburg, Illinois (1916) The Orpheum Theatre, San Francisco, California (1926) The Orpheum Theatre, Memphis, Tennessee (1928)
Wichita’s historic Orpheum Theatre opened to the public on Sept. 4, 1922. After nearly meeting the wrecking ball in the 1980s, the theater is now a staple of Wichita’s entertainment scene.
East Towne Mall was constructed near the intersection of U.S. Route 151 and Interstate 90/94, but was virtually alone when built on over 80 acres (320,000 m 2) of farmland. Now it rests in the center of a large retail area with a number of banks, restaurants and numerous chain big-box stores ranging from Best Buy and Shopko and The Home Depot
The Wisconsin Union is a community membership non-profit organization at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. It welcomes all 18 and over to join. It operates the Memorial Union, Union South, the Pyle Center, The Fluno Center and a number of food outlets in downtown Madison. All UW-Madison students are temporary members, and recent graduates ...
During Overture construction, the Oscar Mayer Theater (originally the 1928 Capitol Theater and movie palace) was restored, downsized, and re-christened the Capitol Theater. The theater's inaugural performance, Wisconsin Chamber Orchestra, upon reopening took place in November 2005. The theater seats up to 1089 people on the main floor and balcony.