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The Providence Performing Arts Center, 220 Weybosset St., has announced its 2024-25 Broadway season. The Taco and The White Family Foundation Broadway Series will feature: "A Beautiful Noise: The ...
For more information, reach out to the PPAC Box Office at 401-574-2787. This article originally appeared on The Providence Journal: 'Hamilton' among highlights of PPAC's 2024-25 schedule Show comments
The Providence Performing Arts Center (PPAC), formerly Loew's State Theatre and Palace Concert Theater, is a multi-use not-for-profit theater located at 220 Weybosset Street in downtown Providence, Rhode Island.
The acronym PPAC may refer to: Providence Performing Arts Center, multi-use theatre in Providence, Rhode Island; People With Parkinson's Advisory Council, a committee of people with Parkinson's Disease; Philipsburgh Performing Arts Center, former name of the Philipsburgh Building in Yonkers, New York.
Location of Downtown Providence within Providence Downtown is the central economic, political, and cultural district of the city of Providence, Rhode Island , United States. It is bounded on the east by Canal Street and the Providence River , to the north by Smith Street, to the west by Interstate 95 , and to the south by Henderson Street.
The Lindemann Performing Arts Center is a performing and visual arts facility at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island. [1] The building is located at 144 Angell Street on Brown's main campus in the city's College Hill neighborhood, and opened in October 2023.
The Wilbury Theatre Group is a nonprofit theatre located in the Olneyville neighborhood of Providence, Rhode Island. It is known for its experimental theater and its annual fringe festival, FringePVD. Wilbury Theatre Group was founded in 2010. The name is a reference to the Traveling Wilburys. [1]
Trinity Rep was founded when a small group of Rhode Island citizens sought to create a professional resident theater company in Providence. Incorporated as "The Foundation for Repertory Theater of Rhode Island, Inc." on March 21, 1963, [6] the group hired Adrian Hall, a New York-based director originally from Texas.