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Along sections of Wood, Washington, Poplar, Market, Fentress and West Blythe Streets, Paris, Henry County, Tennessee Coordinates 36°18′10″N 88°19′33″W / 36.30278°N 88.32583°W / 36.30278; -88
Broadway is a major thoroughfare in the downtown area in Nashville, Tennessee. It includes Lower Broadway , a tourist and entertainment district renowned for honky tonks and live country music . [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The Broadway Historic District or Honky Tonk Highway was listed on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Davidson County ...
The following shows started previews but did not officially open on Broadway: [214] Infidel Caesar (1962 play) — closed after 1 preview performance [215] Venus Is (1966 play) — closed after 7 preview performances [216] The Office (1966 play) — closed after 10 preview performances [217]
The present site of Paris was selected by five commissioners appointed to the task of choosing a county seat at the December 1822 session of the Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions of Henry County. Their choice was a 50-acre (20 ha) site, of which 37.5 acres (15.2 ha) were owned by Joseph Blythe and 12.5 acres (5.1 ha) owned by Peter Ruff; both ...
The building is attached to the Paris Elementary School, which frequently makes use of the auditorium. KPAC consists of a full stage with curtains, backstage/props room, green room, piano room, sound booth, catswalk, lobby with a ticket counter, and a large auditorium that can seat roughly 500-600 people.
Tootsies Orchid Lounge. Tootsie's Orchid Lounge is a honky-tonk bar located on Lower Broadway in Nashville, Tennessee behind the Ryman Auditorium, home in past years and occasionally in the present to the stage and radio show The Grand Ole Opry.
Since 1977, the Orpheum has been the Mid-South home of touring Broadway productions. The Orpheum's two venues also host performances by Ballet Memphis, various concerts, comedians, a summer movie series, a family series of educational programs, and local cultural and community events such as Memphis in May, International Blues Challenge, and special Elvis Week events.
This was a two-storey white weatherboard structure with long two storey verandas, similar to the Donoho Hotel that still stands today. The original Cloyd Hotel was destroyed by fire in 1924, and the current two-storey red brick hotel with portico was built in 1927. [1] A second fire in the 1990s destroyed one wing, which was also rebuilt. [5]