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On March 26, 2008, it was announced that Marcus Theatres of Milwaukee, Wisconsin would buy seven Douglas Theatres, along with the name for $40.5 million. Cinema Center and Q-Cinema 9 in Omaha would continue to be owned by Douglas Theatres, and set close before summer, and Cinema Center would be set to close between October 2008 and February 2009.
Omaha Theater Company For Young People, Omaha, Nebraska; Ontological-Hysteric Theater, New York City, New York; The Open Eye Theater, Margaretville, New York; Open Stage Of Harrisburg, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; OpenStage Theatre and Company, Fort Collins, Colorado [4] Oregon Children's Theatre, Portland, Oregon; Oregon Contemporary Theatre ...
1895 house expanded into a hotel in 1914—when Long Pine boomed as a major railroad terminus—exhibiting an old-fashioned "longitudinal block" layout more typical of Nebraska's earliest hotels. [26]
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The Lied Center for Performing Arts (/ l iː d / LEED; [2] frequently shortened to Lied Center or the Lied) is a multi-venue performing arts facility in Lincoln, Nebraska, United States. It opened in 1990 on the southwest edge of the University of Nebraska–Lincoln's City Campus. The main stage at the Lied Center has a seating capacity of ...
In 1934, Joseph H. Cooper, [3] a long-time theater owner and former partner of Paramount Pictures established the Cooper Foundation. Joseph H. Cooper had filed a suit against Paramount Pictures for $200,000. [4] The foundation once owned and operated fifteen theatres, [5] in Colorado, Nebraska, Oklahoma, and Missouri. It sold off its theater ...
However, film exhibition was limited. In 1990, Mary Riepma Ross, a longtime supporter of the theatre and resident of New York City established a trust for the building of a more adequate media arts center. The theatre was named to honor her $3.5 million gift, and construction began in June 2001, and opened in December 2003.
The Joyo Theater is a historic theater in Lincoln, Nebraska. It is a single-screen movie theater adapted to also host acts on stage such as musicians and movies with a stage-show component. Constructed in 1926 [2] as the New Lyric Theatre, [1] the marquee and ticket booth date from the 1930s. [2]