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The Embassy Theatre, also known as the Embassy 1 Theatre, is a former movie theater at 1560 Broadway, along Times Square, in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City. Designed by Thomas W. Lamb, the theater opened in 1925 on the ground floor of 1560 Broadway, the headquarters of the Actors' Equity Association.
The Metro Theater (formerly the Midtown Theater and Embassy's New Metro Twin) is a defunct movie theater at 2626 Broadway on the Upper West Side of Manhattan in New York City. It was designed by architecture firm Boak and Paris and built between 1932 and 1933.
In 1994 the space was purchased by Sheldon Solow, a New York City–based real-estate developer and owner. [1] By 2009, City Cinemas was the theater's operator. [2] After the Ziegfeld closed in January 2016, the Paris became Manhattan's sole surviving single-screen cinema. [8] In August 2019, a notice of closure was posted.
Village East by Angelika (also Village East, originally the Louis N. Jaffe Art Theatre, and formerly known by several other names [a]) is a movie theater at 189 Second Avenue, on the corner with 12th Street, in the East Village of Manhattan in New York City.
[1] The IAC Building is the headquarters of the media company IAC at 555 West 18th Street on the northeast corner of Eleventh Avenue in the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan , New York City . Designed by Frank Gehry and completed in 2007, it was Gehry's first full-building design in New York City and featured the world's largest high definition ...
The Empire Theatre is on the south side of 42nd Street, between Seventh Avenue and Eighth Avenue near the southern end of Times Square, in the Theater District of Midtown Manhattan in New York City. [1] [2] The theater was originally located at 236–242 West 42nd Street, [3] but it has been moved 168 feet (51 m) west of its original location.
The Times Square Theater is at 215–217 West 42nd Street, on the northern sidewalk between Eighth Avenue and Seventh Avenue, at the southern end of Times Square in the Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City. [1] [2] The building occupies a nearly square land lot covering 10,401 sq ft (966.3 m 2), with a frontage of 105 ft (32 m) on ...
The Elgin Theater is a former movie theater on the corner of 19th Street and Eighth Avenue in the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. The theater showed films from its opening in 1942 until 1978. Its longtime manager, Ben Barenholtz, invented midnight movie programming for the theater.