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Appearance
New York City Theaters
Template
[edit]Table
[edit]Broadway Theatre District (including off-Broadway and Lincoln Center) | ||||||||
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Theater (alpha-sort by original name) |
Address | Current capacity |
Current owner |
Current production (March 2020) |
Type | Architect | Original owner |
Historical open |
Alvin Theatre Neil Simon Theatre |
W. 52nd St. (No. 250) | 1467 | Nederlander Organization | MJ: The Musical[1] | Musical | Herbert J. Krapp | Alexander Pincus | November 22, 1927 |
Ambassador Theatre | W. 49th St. (No. 219) | 1125 | Shubert Organization | Chicago | Musical | Herbert J. Krapp | Shubert Organization | February 11, 1921 |
Apollo Theatre (42nd Street) (demolished 1996) Lyric Theatre (re-built 1998) |
W. 43rd St. (No. 214) | 1622 | Ambassador Theatre Group | Harry Potter and the Cursed Child | Play | Eugene De Rosa | Selwyn brothers | November 17, 1920 |
Astor Theatre | Broadway (No. 1537) | demolished 1982 for the Marquis Theatre |
George Keister | Wagenhais and Kemper | September 21, 1906 | |||
Ethel Barrymore Theatre | W. 47th St. (No. 243) | 1096 | Shubert Organization | The Inheritance[2] | Play | Herbert J. Krapp | Shubert brothers | December 20, 1928 |
Vivian Beaumont Theater | W. 65th St. (No. 150) | 1080 | Lincoln Center Theatre | Flying Over Sunset[3] | Musical | Eero Saarinen (building) Jo Mielziner (theater) |
Open-ended | October 21, 1965 |
Martin Beck Theatre Al Hirschfeld Theatre |
W. 45th St. (No. 302) | 1424 | Jujamcyn Theaters | Moulin Rouge![4] | Musical | G. Albert Lansburgh | Martin Beck | November 11, 1924 |
Bijou Theatre | W. 45th St. (No. 209) | demolished 1982 for the Marquis Theatre |
Herbert J. Krapp | Shubert brothers | April 12, 1917 | |||
Booth Theatre | W. 45th St. (No. 222) | 766 | Shubert Organization | Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?[5] | Play | Henry B. Herts | Shubert Organization | October 16, 1913 |
Broadhurst Theatre | W. 44th St. (No. 235) | 1186 | Shubert Organization | Jagged Little Pill[6] | Musical | Herbert J. Krapp | Shubert brothers | September 27, 1917 |
Circle in the Square Theatre | W. 50th St. (No. 235) | 840 | Independent | American Buffalo[7] | Play | Alan Sayles | Theodore Mann José Quintero Jason Wingreen et. al |
November 5, 1972 |
Cort Theatre | W. 48th St. (No. 138) | 1084 | Shubert Organization | The Minutes[8] | Play | Thomas W. Lamb | John Cort | December 20, 1912 |
Comedy Theatre | W. 41st St. (No. 110) | 687 | demolished 1942 | D.G. Malcolm | Shubert brothers | September 6, 1909 | ||
Craig Theatre Adelphi Theatre |
W. 54th St. (No. 152) | 1434 | demolished 1970 for the New York Hilton |
R.E. Hall & Co., Inc. consulting engineers (né Robert E. Hall; 1881–1953) |
Houston Properties Corporation | December 24, 1928 | ||
63rd Street Music Hall Cort 63rd Street Theatre Coburn Theatre (1928) Recital Theatre (1932) Park Lane Theatre (1932) Gilmore's 63rd Street Theatre (1934) Experimental Theatre Daly's 63rd Street Theatre (1938) |
W. 63rd St. (No. 22) | demolished 1957 | Thomas W. Lamb | Davenport Stock Company John Cort |
February 21, 1921 | |||
Folies Bergere Fulton Theatre |
W. 46th St. (No. 210) | dinner theatre with vaudeville |
demolished 1982 for the Marquis Theatre |
Herts & Tallant | Henry B. Harris Jesse L. Lasky |
April 27, 1911 | ||
Samuel J. Friedman Theatre | W. 47th St. (No. 261) | 650 | Manhattan Theatre Club | How I Learned to Drive[9] | Play | Herbert J. Krapp | Chanin brothers | December 7, 1925 |
Gaiety Theatre | Broadway (No. 1547) | demolished 1982 for the Marquis Theatre |
Herts & Tallant | George M. Cohan | September 4, 1909 | |||
Gallo Opera House Studio 54 |
W. 54th St. (No. 254) | 1006 | Roundabout Theatre Company | Caroline, or Change[10] | Musical | Eugene De Rosa | Fortune Gallo | November 14, 1927 |
Globe Theatre Lunt-Fontanne Theatre |
W. 46th St. (No. 205) | 1519 | Nederlander Organization | Tina—The Tina Turner Musical[11] | Musical | Carrère and Hastings | Charles Dillingham | January 10, 1910 |
Guild Theatre August Wilson Theatre |
W. 52nd St. (No. 245) | 1228 | Jujamcyn Theaters | Mean Girls | Musical | C. Howard Crane & Kenneth Franzheim |
Theatre Guild | February 16, 1925 |
Harrigan's Theatre Garrick Theatre |
W. 35th St. (No. 67) | 910 | demolished 1932 | Broadway theatre | Francis H. Kimball | Edward Harrigan | December 22, 1890 | |
Hippodrome | Sixth Avenue (between West 43rd and West 44th Sts.) |
5300 | demolished 1939 | Broadway theatre | Frederick Thompson & Jay Herbert Morgan |
Frederick Thompson & Elmer Dundy |
1905 | |
Hudson Theatre | W. 44th St. (No. 141) | 975 | Ambassador Theatre Group | Plaza Suite[12] | Play | J. B. McElfatrick & Son (1902) Israels & Harder (1903) |
Henry B. Harris | October 19, 1903 |
Imperial Theatre | W. 45th St. (No. 249) | 1443 | Shubert Organization | Ain't Too Proud[13] | Musical | Herbert J. Krapp | Shubert brothers | December 25, 1923 |
Jolson's 59th Street Theatre New Century Theatre |
932 Seventh Ave. (no. 932) | 1700 | demolished 1962 | Broadway theatre | Herbert J. Krapp | Shubert brothers | October 6, 1921 | |
Little Theatre Hayes Theater |
W. 44th St. (No. 240) | 597 | Second Stage Theater | Take Me Out[14] | Play | Harry Creighton Ingalls | Winthrop Ames | March 12, 1912 |
Longacre Theatre | W. 48th St. (No. 220) | 1091 | Shubert Organization | Diana[15] | Musical | Henry Beaumont Herts | Harry Frazee | April 28, 1913 |
Lyceum Theatre | W. 45th St. (No. 149) | 922 | Shubert Organization | Sing Street[16] | Musical | Herts & Tallant | Daniel Frohman | November 2, 1903 |
Lyric Theatre | W. 42nd St. (Nos. 213 & 214–226) | demoloshed the interior 1996 and combined with the former Apollo on 42nd, then re-named the Lyric |
Broadway theatre | Victor Hugo Koehler | Shubert brothers | October 12, 1903 | ||
Majestic Theatre | W. 44th St. (No. 245) | 1645 | Shubert Organization | The Phantom of the Opera | Musical | Herbert J. Krapp | Chanin brothers | March 28, 1927 |
Mansfield Theatre Brooks Atkinson Theatre |
W. 47th St. (No. 256) | 1094 | Nederlander Organization | Six[17] | Musical | Herbert J. Krapp | Chanin brothers | February 1, 1926 |
Marquis Theatre (re-built 1896) |
W. 46th St. (No. 210) | 1612 | Nederlander Organization | Once Upon a One More Time | Musical | John C. Portman Jr. | Nederlander Organization | July 9, 1986 |
Theatre Masque John Golden Theatre |
W. 45th St. (No. 252) | 805 | Shubert Organization | Hangmen[18] | Play | Herbert J. Krapp | Chanin brothers | February 24, 1927 |
Maxine Elliott's Theatre | W. 39th St. (No. 109) | 935 | demoloshed 1960 to make way for the Springs Mills Building (last remaining Broadway theater below 41st St.) |
Broadway theatre | Marshall and Fox | Maxine Elliott (50%) Shubert brothers (50%) |
December 30, 1908 | |
Henry Miller's Theatre Stephen Sondheim Theatre |
W. 43rd St. (No. 124) | 1055 | Roundabout Theatre Company | Mrs. Doubtfire[19] | Musical | Paul R. Allen Ingalls & Hoffman |
Henry Miller | April 1, 1918 |
Minskoff Theatre | W. 45th St. (No. 200) | 1710 | Nederlander Organization | The Lion King | Musical | Kahn and Jacobs | Sam Minskoff and Sons | March 13, 1973 |
Morosco Theatre | W. 45th St. (No. 217) | demolished 1982 for the Marquis Theatre |
Herbert J. Krapp | Shubert brothers | February 5, 1917 | |||
B.S. Moss's Colony Theatre Broadway Theatre |
W. 53rd St & Broadway (No. 1681) | 1761 | Shubert Organization | West Side Story[20] | Musical | Eugene De Rosa | Benjamin S. Moss | December 25, 1924 |
Music Box Theatre | W. 45th St. (No. 239) | 1009 | Shubert Organization | Dear Evan Hansen | Musical | C. Howard Crane | Irving Berlin & Sam H. Harris |
September 19, 1921 |
National Theatre Nederlander Theatre |
W. 41st St. (No. 208) | 1235 | Nederlander Organization | The Lehman Trilogy[21] | Play | William Neil Smith | Shubert brothers | September 1, 1921 |
New Amsterdam Theatre | W. 42nd St. (No. 214) | 1747 | Disney Theatrical Group | Aladdin | Musical | Herts & Tallant | Erlanger & Klaw | October 23, 1903 (NRHP: 1980) |
New Theatre Century Theatre |
62nd St. & Central Park West |
2300 | demolished 1931 | Musicals | Carrère and Hastings | Winthrop Ames | November 6, 1909 | |
Eugene O'Neill Theatre | W. 49th St. (No. 230) (between 48th & 49th) |
1066 | Jujamcyn Theaters | The Book of Mormon | Musical | Herbert J. Krapp | Shubert brothers | November 24, 1925 |
Palace Theatre | W. 47th St. & Broadway (No. 1564) | 1743 | Nederlander Organization | Closed for renovations (2018–2021) |
Kirchoff & Rose | Martin Beck | March 24, 1913 | |
Playhouse Theatre | W. 48th St. (no. 137) | demolished 1969 for Rockefeller Center expansion |
Charles A. Rich | William A. Brady | 1911 | |||
Plymouth Theatre Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre |
W. 45th St. (No. 236) | 1079 | Shubert Organization | Come from Away | Musical | Herbert J. Krapp | Shubert brothers Arthur Hopkins (original lessee) |
October 10, 1917 |
Ritz Theatre Walter Kerr Theatre |
W. 48th St. (No. 219) | 945 | Jujamcyn Theaters | Hadestown[22] | Musical | Herbert J. Krapp | Shubert brothers | March 21, 1921 |
RKO Roxy Theatre (Roxy was Samuel Roxy Rothafel's nickname) Center Theatre |
Sixth Avenue (No. 1230) | 3500 | demolished 1954 | Movies & ice-skating spectacles |
Edward Durrell Stone | Rockefeller Center | December 29, 1932 | |
Richard Rodgers Theatre | W. 46th St. (No. 226) | 1400 | Nederlander Organization | Hamilton | Musical | Irwin Chanin | Chanin brothers | December 24, 1925 |
Royale Theater Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre |
W. 45th St. (No. 242) | 1078 | Shubert Organization | Company[23] | Musical | Herbert J. Krapp | Chanin brothers | January 11, 1927 |
St. James Theatre | W. 44th St. (No. 246) | 1709 | Jujamcyn Theaters | Frozen | Musical | Warren and Wetmore | A. L. Erlanger | September 26, 1927 |
Selwyn Theatre American Airlines Theatre |
W. 42nd St. (No. 227) | 740 | Roundabout Theatre Company | A Soldier's Play[10] | Play | George Keister | Selwyn brothers | October 2, 1918 |
Shubert Theatre | W. 44th St. (No. 225) | 1460 | Shubert Organization | To Kill a Mockingbird | Play | Henry Beaumont Herts | Shubert Organization | October 21, 1913 |
Stuyvesant Theatre Belasco Theatre |
W. 44th St. (No. 111) | 1018 | Shubert Organization | Girl from the North Country[24] | Musical | George Keister | George Keister | October 16, 1907 |
Uris Theatre Gershwin Theatre |
W. 51st St. (No. 222) | 1933 | Nederlander Organization | Wicked | Musical | Ralph Alswang | Uris Buildings Corporation | November 28, 1972 |
Weber and Fields' Music Hall (Joe Weber & Lew Fields) 44th Street Theatre |
W. 44th St. (No. 216) | demolished 1945 | William A. Swansea | Shubert brothers | November 21, 1912 | |||
Winter Garden Theatre | W. 50th St. & Broadway (No. 1634) | 1526 | Shubert Organization | Beetlejuice[25] | Musical | Herbert J. Krapp | Shubert brothers | March 10, 1911 |
Ziegfeld Theatre | Sixth Avenue (No. 1341) (at 54th Street) |
1638 | demolished 1966 | Musical | Florenz Ziegfeld, Jr. William Randolph Hearst |
Joseph Urban & Thomas W. Lamb |
February 2, 1927 |
John's Pizzeria
[edit]Broadway Theatre District (including off-Broadway and Lincoln Center) | ||||||||
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Theater (alpha-sort by original name) |
Address | Current capacity |
Type | Architect | Original owner |
Historical open | ||
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W. 44th St. (no. 260) Originally Eighth Ave. (nos. 690 & 692) |
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John's Pizzeria at 260 West 44th Street is on the bottom two floors of a 6-story building – the bottom two floors having originally been an auditorium for the Christian Alliance. The building adjoins what used to be the Gospel Tabernacle Church, which were part of an L-shaped edifice covering 4 lots on the East side of Eighth Avenue and the South side of West 44th Street. In addition to the auditorium, the complex housed three chapels, and an educational building for a Christian Alliance Training Institute, a book store on the ground floor, and a missionary home or Christian hotel with accommodations for about 100 guests. H.E. Hartwell Glass Works (Horace Edgar Hartwell), as creditor, is listed in an August 3, 1889, publication as having released on July 19, 1889, a mechanics lien back to the Gospel Tabernacle, as debtor. In 1890, the Gospel Tabernacle Church maintained
The pizzeria features a large mural by Douglas Cooper (né William Douglas Cooper; born 1946). |
23rd Street
[edit]Old 23rd Street Theatre District | ||||||||
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Theater (alpha-sort by original name) |
Address | Capacity | Current production (March 2020) |
Type | Architect | Original owner |
Historical open | |
Ferrero's Apollo Hall St. James Theatre (1870) Fifth Avenue Theatre (1873) |
W. 28th St. (No. 31) (at Broadway) Garment District, Midtown |
1530 | demolished 1939 | Edward Ferrero Augustin Daly |
October 19, 1868 | |||
Lyceum Theatre | Park Avenue (between 23rd and 24th Streets) |
727 | demolished 1902 for the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company Tower |
Louis Comfort Tiffany (aspects of the interior) Thomas Edison (lights) |
Daniel Frohman | April 6, 1885 | ||
Banvard's Museum (1867) Banvard's Grand Opera House and Museum (1867) Wood's Museum and Metropolitan (1868) Broadway Theatre (1876) Daly's Theatre (1879) |
Broadway (No. 1221) (at 30th St.) Garment District, Midtown |
demolished 1920 | burlesque & cinema |
William A. Lillienthal & John Banvard |
June 17, 1867 | |||
Casino Theatre | Broadway (No. 1404) (southwest corner at W. 39th St.) Garment District, Midtown |
875 (1882–1905) 1300 (1905–1930) |
demolished 1930 to make way for expansion of the Garment District |
musicals & operettas |
Francis H. Kimball & Thomas Wisedell |
October 21, 1882 | ||
Garden Theatre | Madison Ave. (Nos. 55–61) & E. 27th St. (Nos. 22–32) Garment District, Midtown |
1200, plus 400 standing |
demolished 1925 | Stanford White | Thomas Henry French (Samuel French's son) |
September 17, 1890 | ||
Madison Square Theatre Fifth Avenue Theatre Daly's Fifth Avenue Theatre Hoyt's Madison Square Theatre Hoyt's Theatre |
Broadway at 24th St. (Madison Square Park) Flatiron District |
900, plus 100 standing |
demolished 1908 to may way for a 14-story office and store building erected by Henry Clay Eno (1840–1914) & Henry Lane Eno |
Steele MacKaye | 1865 | |||
Pike's Opera House Grand Opera House |
W. 23th St. (No. 303) (at Broadway) Chelsea neighborhood |
demolished 1960 | Griffith Thomas | Samuel N. Pike (1822–1872) | January 6, 1868 |
Lower Manhattan, Old Yiddish theater district
[edit]Lower Manhattan, Old Yiddish Theatre District | ||||||||
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Theater (alpha-sort by original name) |
Address | Capacity | Current production (March 2020) |
Type | Architect | Original owner |
Historical open | |
Adler-Thomashefsky National Theatre National Theater |
Houston St. (nos. 111–117; southwest corner of Second Ave., fka Chrystie, and Houston St. Yiddish Theatre District |
demolished 1959 | Thomas W. Lamb | Boris Thomashefsky & Julius Adler |
September 24, 1912 | |||
Grand Theatre | 255 Grand St. (no. 255; at Chrystie St.) |
closed 1930 | Jacob Pavlovitch Adler | February 5, 1903 | ||||
Second Avenue Theatre | Second Ave. (nos. 35–37) | 2000
|
David Kessler Henry Irving Max R. Wilner |
September 14, 1911 | ||||
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Second Ave. (no. 181–189; at E. 12th St.) |
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Harrison G. Wiseman (architect) William Pogany (interior) |
Louis N. Jaffe Maurice Schwartz |
November 11, 1926 |
Lower Manhattan
[edit]Lower Manhattan | ||||||||
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Theater (alpha-sort by original name) |
Address | Capacity | Status | Type | Architect | Owners / managers |
Historical open | |
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Lafayette St. (no. 425)[28] |
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Broadway Theatre Old Broadway Theatre |
Broadway (nos. 326–330) (between Pearl & Anthony, now Worth, Sts.) |
4000
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demolished June 11, 1859 | John M. Trimble | Alvah Mann James R. Raymond George Barrett E. A. Marshall William Rufus Blake |
September 27, 1847 | ||
Castle Garden | Battery Park | demolished 1938 | July 3, 1824 | |||||
Theatre Francais Lyceum (1871) Haverly's 14th Street Theatre (1879) Civic Repertory Theatre (1926) |
W. 14th St. (No. 107) (just west of Sixth Avenue) Chelsea neighborhood |
demolished 1938 | Alexander Saeltzer | May 26, 1866 | ||||
Church of the Messiah The New Theatre Comique |
Broadway (nos. 728–730) (near Waverly Place) Greenwich Village |
destroyed by fire December 23, 1884 |
Alexander Turney Stewart | January 1865 | ||||
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Bowery St. (No. 46–48) (Lower East Side) Chinatown |
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Chatham Garden Theatre | Chatham Street (No. 86) (just west of Pearl, between Pearl and where Duane used to be) Current neighborhood of Two Bridges |
converted to the Free Presbyterian Chatham Street Chapel in 1832; demolished 1929 |
George Conklin | May 17, 1824 | ||||
Chatham Theatre Purdy's National Theatre |
Chatham Street (Nos. 143–149) (just west of James St., between James St. and where Roosevelt St. used to be) Current neighborhood of Two Bridges |
demolished 1862 | Thomas Flynn & Henry Willard |
September 11, 1839 | ||||
John Street Theatre | John St. (Nos. 15–21) Current Financial District |
demolished 1798 | David Douglass (c. 1720–1786) American Company Lewis Hallam, Jr. |
December 7, 1767 | ||||
Miner's Bowery Theatre[29] | Bowery (nos. 165–167) | destroyed by fire August 1929 |
Henry C. Dudley | Henry Clay Miner | 1879 | |||
Columbia Garden (1823) Sans Souci (1828) Niblo's Garden Niblo's Theatre (1834) |
Broadway (near Prince St.) |
demolished 1895 to make way for a large office building erected by Henry O. Havemeyer |
William Niblo | 1823 | ||||
Park Theatre | Park Row (Nos. 21, 23, 25) (near Prince St.; about 200 feet (61 m) east of Ann Street; backing Theatre Alley) |
destroyed by fire December 16, 1848 |
Marc Isambard Brunel Joseph-François Mangin Charles Mangin |
January 1798 | ||||
New York Ranelagh Gardens | ||||||||
Tripler's Hall Metropolitan Hall Winter Garden Theatre |
Broadway (no. 667), across from Bond Street just south of Amity Street (today's West Third Street) |
1850 | ||||||
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Bowery (nos. 37–39) |
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New York Vauxhall Gardens (original location) |
Greenwich St. (near the Hudson River, between what later became Warren and Chambers Sts.; current site of P.S. 234) |
moved in 1798 | Samuel Fraunces | 1767 | ||||
New York Vauxhall Gardens (second location) |
Broome Street (between Broadway and the Bowery) |
moved in 1805 | Joseph Delacroix | 1798 | ||||
New York Vauxhall Gardens (third location) |
Lafayette Street (stretching from 4th to 8th Sts. in what were then the northern reaches of the city; the area that later became Astor Place, 4th Street, Broadway, and the Bowery) |
demolished 1855 | Joseph Delacroix | 1805 |
Harlem and the rest of upper Manhattan
[edit]Harlem and the rest of Upper Manhattan | ||||||||
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Theater (alpha-sort by original name) |
Address | Capacity | Status | Type | Architect | Owners / managers |
Historical open | |
Alhambra Theatre | Seventh Ave. (no. 2225; at 132nd St.) |
1650
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Mulit-purpose (non-theater)
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Vaudeville | John Bailey McElfatrick | Orpheum Amusement Company | May 15, 1905 | |
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125th St. (no. 253 between Frederick Douglass Blvd. aka Eighth Ave., and Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., Blvd. aka Seventh Ave.) |
1837
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Lafayette Theatre | Seventh Ave. (no. 2225; at 132nd St.) |
1500
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demolished 2013 | Victor Hugo Koehler | Meyer Jarmulowsky | November 1912 |
Yorkville and the rest of the Upper East Side
[edit]Yorkville and the rest of the Upper East Side | ||||||||
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Theater (alpha-sort by original name) |
Address | Capacity | Current production (March 2020) |
Type | Architect | Original owner |
Historical open | |
Yorkville Theatre | E. 86th St. (nos. 157–161) | 1863 |
Brooklyn
[edit]Brooklyn | ||||||||
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Theater (alpha-sort by original name) |
Address | Capacity | Current production (March 2020) |
Type | Architect | Original owner |
Historical open | |
Park Theatre | Fulton St. (nos. 381–383) | destroyed by fire November 12, 1908 |
1863 |
Theater notes
[edit]- Theatre Historical Society historictheatres
.org - R.E. Hall, consulting engineer
- theater list
- Lost Broadway Theatres, by Nicholas Van Hoogstraten (1991)
Notes and references
[edit]Possible references
[edit]- A History of the New York Stage – From the First Performance in 1732 to 1901], by T. Allston Brown, Dodd, Mead and Company (1903)
Notes
[edit]- ^ John Herman Edelman (1852–1900), architect
- ^ Lyndon Peck Smith (1862–1919), architect
- ^ Rev. Albert Benjamin Simpson (1843–1919) founded the Christian Alliance Gospel Tabernacle Church in 1882. There is a musical published (1986), The Simpson Story, about the life of A.B. Simpson; words by Dr. Simpson, music arrangements by Doris J. Graff. (OCLC 46815901)
- ^ Madeline Castellotti (née Madeline Mazzo; 1941–2004)
- ^ Feliciano "Frank" Acierno (1867–1955), father-in-law of actress Gilda Mignonette.
- ^ Larry Fay was a name partner of Alexander Yokel (1887–1947) in Fay's Bowery Theatre.
- ^ Otto von Hoym-Söllingen (1823–1876)
- ^ Jules Hurtig (né Julius Hurtig; 1868–1928) was, for 47 years, a partner of Harry J. Seamon. His brother, Benjamin F. Hurtig (1866–1909) had been the original partner with Seamon.
- ^ Harry J. Seamon (born abt. 1866 New York)
- ^ Billy Minsky (né Michael William Minsky; 1887–1932)
- ^ Sidney S. Cohen (né Sidney Samuel Cohen; 1880–1935) and been founding in 1920 of the Motion Picture Theater Owners of America, a post he held until 1925. In 1932, soon after Billy Minsky died, Cohen purchased the Apollo outright. Cohen the theater in 1934 to Frank Schiffman and Leo Brecher, who renamed the hall the 125 Street Apollo and reopened it on January 26, 1934, with an advertisement in the New York Age claiming that the Apollo was "the finest theater in Harlem." After Cohen's death, business partner Morris Sussman teamed with Schiffman, who ran the Harlem Opera House, and a merger between the two theaters was formed this was in the early 20th century.
- ^ Morris Sussman (1888–1975)
- ^ Frank Schiffman (1893–1974), a partner with Leo Brecher, under the auspices of Apco Theatres Corp.
- ^ Leo Brecher (né Leiser Brecher; 1889–1980), a partner with Frank Schiffman, under the auspices of Apco Theatres Corp.
References
[edit]- ^ Desk, BWW News (2019-10-10). "MJ THE MUSICAL Officially Set For the Neil Simon Theatre Beginning July 6, 2020". BroadwayWorld.com. Retrieved 2019-10-10.
{{cite web}}
:|last=
has generic name (help) - ^ McPhee, Ryan. "Two-Part, Gay-Themed The Inheritance Will Play Broadway" Playbill.com, June 6, 2019
- ^ Clement, Olivia. "Carmen Cusack, Harry Hadden-Paton, and Tony Yazbeck to Lead Cast of New Broadway Musical Flying Over Sunset" Playbill.com, August 20, 2019
- ^ McPhee, Ryan. "Moulin Rouge! Musical Sets Broadway Dates and Theatre; Aaron Tveit and Karen Olivo to Star" Playbill.com, November 19, 2018
- ^ Gans, Andrew. "Revival of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Starring Laurie Metcalf and Rupert Everett, Sets Broadway Home" Playbill.com, September 16, 2019
- ^ Peikert, Mark. "Jagged Little Pill Announces Broadway Dates". Playbill. Retrieved May 3, 2019.
- ^ McPhee, Ryan. "American Buffalo Revival Taps Darren Criss, Sets Broadway Theatre" Playbill.com, October 24, 2019
- ^ Clement, Olivia. "Jessie Mueller, Tracy Letts, Armie Hammer, and More to Star in Letts’ The Minutes on Broadway" Playbill.com, November 7, 2019
- ^ Clement, Olivia. "Mary-Louise Parker and David Morse to Star in Paula Vogel's How I Learned to Drive—Again—on Broadway" Playbill.com, August 13, 2019
- ^ a b McPhee, Ryan. "Caroline, or Change Will Return to Broadway" Playbill.com, August 19, 2019
- ^ McPhee, Ryan. "Tina—The Tina Turner Musical Sets Broadway Theatre and Dates" Playbill.com, April 11, 2019
- ^ McPhee, Ryan. "Matthew Broderick and Sarah Jessica Parker to Return to Broadway Together in Neil Simon's Plaza Suite" Playbill.com, September 10, 2019
- ^ McPhee, Ryan. "Ain't Too Proud—The Life and Times of the Temptations Sets Dates for Spring Broadway Bow" Playbill.com, October 2, 2018
- ^ Clement, Olivia. "Second Stage Season Includes First Broadway Revival of Take Me Out, Plus New Plays by Bess Wohl and Tracy Letts" Playbill.com, March 26, 2019
- ^ Gans, Andrew. "Diana Musical, About Late Princess Diana, Will Play Broadway" Playbill.com, August 12, 2019
- ^ Playbill Staff. "Sing Street Musical to Transfer to Broadway" Playbill.com, January 8, 2020
- ^ McPhee, Ryan. "Six Musical, Putting Henry VIII’s Wives in the Spotlight, Heads to Broadway" Playbill.com, August 1, 2019
- ^ Clement, Olivia. "Off-Broadway Hit Hangmen Will Make Broadway Debut in 2020" Playbill.com, November 18, 2019
- ^ Clement, Olivia. "Mrs. Doubtfire Musical Sets Broadway Cast and Dates" Playbill.com, October 16, 2019
- ^ McPhee, Ryan. "Isaac Powell, Shereen Pimentel, More Set for West Side Story Broadway Revival" Playbill.com, July 10, 2019
- ^ Clement, Olivia (September 3, 2019). "The Lehman Trilogy to Open on Broadway". Playbill. Retrieved 2019-09-03.
- ^ McPhee, Ryan. "Hadestown Musical Sets Broadway Dates and Theatre" Playbill.com, November 27, 2018
- ^ McPhee, Ryan. "London’s Gender-Bent Company Will Play Broadway With Katrina Lenk and Patti LuPone" Playbill.com, August 30, 2019
- ^ McPhee, Ryan. "Bob Dylan Musical Girl From the North Country to Play Broadway" Playbill.com, June 18, 2019
- ^ McPhee, Ryan. "Beetlejuice Musical Sets Spring 2019 Broadway Opening Date" Playbill.com, September 13, 2018
- ^ Louis Sullivan and His Mentor, John Herman Edelmann, Architect, by Charles E. Gregersen, AIA, NCARB, Author House (2013); OCLC 854615082
- ^ The Life of A. B. Simpson, by Albert Edward Thompson, Christian Alliance Publishing Co. (1920); OCLC 1141352704, 1121227105
- ^ African American Theater Buildings: An Illustrated Historical Directory – An Illustrated Historical Directory, 1900–1955, by Eric Ledell Smith, McFarland & Company (2003), p. 146
- ^ Harry Miner's American Dramatic Directory for the Season of 1884–'85 – A Complete Directory of the Dramatic and Operatic Professions and a Guide to the Opera Houses, Theatres and Public Halls of America, Harry C. Miner (ed.), Wolf & Palmer Dramatic Publishing Company (1884)