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In July 2000, a $6.7 million grant from the Commonwealth of Kentucky was given to fund the Southern Kentucky Performing Arts Center, Inc. (SKyPAC), a facility for larger performing arts productions than the Capitol Arts Center could host, including tours. SKyPAC managed The Capitol Arts Center until 2021.
3 Bowling Green. 4 Danville. 5 ... Flashback Theater Co. is a semi-professional theater company in Somerset, Kentucky with the mission of exploring our present ...
Van Meter Hall was the first building constructed on the campus of Western Kentucky University. [3] It was also the first building on the campus designed by Louisville architect Brinton B. Davis, nicknamed the "hill builder" due to his vast work designing the majority of the university layout from 1909 until 1939.
The Houchens Center is a cultural and educational center for the Bowling Green, Kentucky community, and a meeting place for clubs, associations, and the individual patrons who make up the membership. The center is also available to non-members for club meetings, workshops, retreats, receptions, parties and weddings.
The Chitlin' Circuit was a collection of performance venues found throughout the eastern, southern, and upper Midwest areas of the United States. They provided commercial and cultural acceptance for African-American musicians, comedians, and other entertainers following the era of venues run by the "white-owned-and-operated Theatre Owners Booking Association (TOBA)...formed in 1921."
Cinema chains have joined forces to invest more than $2 billion in multiplexes across the country. Theater owners plan to add pickleball, ropes courses, and bowling to the moviegoing experience ...
Warmest: Bowling Green, Kentucky Two cities are tied for the warmest in Kentucky. Bowling Green and Paducah in the western part of the state have average high temps of 69 degrees.
Booth Fire & Safety, Bowling Green, 1948 Capitol Arts Center (former Columbia Theatre), Bowling Green, 1921; Galloway Farm Equipment (now Booth Fire & Safety), Modern Automotive District, Bowling Green, 1948