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The Virginia Theatre hosts a wide variety of events throughout the year. Classic films play on the 56-foot-wide screen several nights every month. The theatre is also a popular venue for touring musical acts and comedians. From 1992 until 2010, the Champaign-Urbana Theatre Company, or CUTC, performed plays at the theatre.
Virginia Theater [6] 203 W Park Street 1921 Italian Renaissance Revival, Spanish Revival November 28, 2003 Wee Haven: 1509 W Park Avenue 1925 Prairie School December 15, 2011 West Side Park: Women's Town Club (Buzzard Organ Factory) 112 W Hill Street 1897 Richardsonian Romanesque
Part of San Antonio Downtown and River Walk Historic District 84: Maverick-Altgelt Ranch and Fenstermaker-Fromme Farm: Maverick-Altgelt Ranch and Fenstermaker-Fromme Farm: April 12, 1979 : Address restricted [6] San Antonio: Smithsonian trinomials: 41BX493, 41BX494, 41BX495, 41BX496, 41BX497, 41BX498 85: Maverick-Carter House: Maverick-Carter House
Typical Monte Vista Historic District street sign. Bounded by Hildebrand Avenue to the north, Broadway to the east, I-10 to the west and I-35 to the south, Eastside of San Antonio's Historic District features an assortment of neighborhoods ranging from the working class Beacon Hill to the up-and-coming Five Points to the established upper middle class Monte Vista.
[6] [7] [8] The Public Art League, a nonprofit organization, oversaw the project, working in collaboration with the Champaign Park District, the University of Illinois College of Media, and the city governments of both Champaign and Urbana to erect the statue outside of the Virginia Theatre in downtown Champaign.
The Champaign-Urbana Theatre Company was formed to perform major musicals and opened their first season with "The Music Man" that June. Control passed to the Virginia Theatre group in 1996 and the theater became a nonprofit public venue. The Champaign Park District assumed control of the facilities in 2000.
August 28, 1989 (202 E. Daniel St. Champaign: 10: Building at 201 North Market Street: Building at 201 North Market Street: November 7, 1997 (201 N. Market St.
Its original Wurlitzer theatre pipe organ [13] has been maintained by Warren York since 1988 and is still played regularly. The Art Theater [14] in downtown Champaign began as Champaign's first theatre devoted to movies, the Park, in 1912, and is a small venue showing films not normally playing at the box office. The theatre is the only single ...