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Williamsburg Cinemas is a first-run multiplex theater located in Williamsburg, Brooklyn in New York City, on the corner of Grand Street and Driggs Avenue. [2] Williamsburg Cinemas has seven theaters inside of it, is 19,000 square-feet wide, a concession stand , and has stadium-seating.
Times Square is home to many of the country's TV studios, as well as the heart of New York's theater district. All Mobile Video; GUM Studios Locations: 2-15 Borden Avenue, Long Island City, NY 11101 and 4508 2nd Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11232 AVM Unitel, 57th Street, 515 West 57th Street: houses CenterStage
Nitehawk Williamsburg in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Nitehawk was founded by Matthew Viragh. Viragh sought to establish a dine-in movie theater in New York City in 2008, after being a regular attendee at the Alamo Drafthouse Cinema while living in Austin, Texas, [3] and later working at the Commodore Theatre in Portsmouth, Virginia, the first first-run movie theater in the United States to serve ...
8th Street Playhouse; Beekman Theatre; Bleecker Street Cinema; City Cinemas Beekman Theatre [5] Fine Arts Theatre; Lincoln Plaza Cinemas; Landmark Sunshine Cinema; Thalia Theatre; Tribeca Cinemas; Ziegfeld Theatre (1969) The Landmark at 57 West; Theater 80 at St Marks Place [Film Geek, 2023, Documentary, Dir. Richard Shepard]
National Lampoon's Movie Madness: April 1982: Pandemonium: May 14, 1982: The House Where Evil Dwells: May 28, 1982: Rocky III: May 1982: Safari 3000: July 2, 1982: The Secret of NIMH: distribution as MGM/UA Entertainment Co.; produced by Aurora and Don Bluth Productions: August 4, 1982: Lola [N 38] distribution under United Artists Classics ...
St. James Theatre 19th century Washington Street: Suffolk Drive-In 1955 circa 1970 circa East Boston: Superb Theatre 20th century Columbus Avenue [3] Theatre Comique: 1860s Washington Street: Theatre Comique 1906 Tremont Row: Toy Theatre 1914 Dartmouth Street Tremont Theatre: 1827 Tremont Street: Tremont Theatre, Studio Building: 1860s [12 ...
Slave Theater, also called the Slave I, was a movie theater located at 1215 Fulton Street in Bedford–Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, New York City. The theater was founded in 1984 by Brooklyn judge John Phillips to screen a film he had produced and became a center of civil rights organizing in Brooklyn. John Phillips named the theater as a reminder of ...
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.