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The E Street Cinema in Washington, D.C., opened a bar. The Bethesda Row Cinema [24] in Maryland, located outside of Washington, D.C., was completely renovated in May 2013 with new, reserved seating in all eight auditoriums and a full-service bar featuring local brews and film-themed cocktails. Located in downtown Highland Park, Chicago ...
U Street: 2008 150 Sitar Arts Center Adams Morgan: 2001 0 Studio 1469 Columbia Heights: Studio Theatre: Mead Theater 4th Street: 1978 218 Studio Theatre Metheny Theater 4th Street: 1978 200 Studio Theatre Milton Theater 4th Street: 1978 187 Studio Theatre Stage 4 4th Street: 1978 120 Warner Theatre: Penn Quarter: 1992 (built 1924) 1847
The Tivoli Theatre is a landmark building in the Columbia Heights neighborhood of Washington, D.C., on 14th Street and Park Road Northwest. Originally built as a movie theater, it currently (as of 2006) exhibits live stage productions as the home of the GALA Hispanic Theatre.
The OSS Society and State Department engaged in efforts with the National Park Service to add the E Street Complex to the National Register of Historic Places. [6] [7] [8] On December 14, 2016, the effort was successful. [9] *Note: The E Street Complex is not to be confused with the Old Naval Observatory. The E Street Complex occupied a portion ...
Opened on October 29, 1936, [4] the theater was designed by architect John Jacob Zink, whose firm designed over 200 theaters across the United States, and the 14th built by Warner Brothers in Washington, D.C. [5] The exterior is constructed of yellow and red brick and the facade is partially faced in limestone fluted panels.
The Studio Theatre is a non-profit theater production company located in the 14th Street corridor of Washington, D.C. It produces contemporary plays in a four-stage complex. Stages include the Metheny, the Mead and Milton, and Stage 4, a black box.
The Bethesda Theatre, constructed in 1938, is a historic Streamline Moderne movie theater located at 7719 Wisconsin Avenue (), Bethesda, Maryland, United States.It is a multi-level building composed of rectangular blocks: an auditorium block and a lower street-front lobby and entrance block, including shops.
That year, the theatre was restored by the U Street Theatre Foundation, with $9 million of aid from the District of Columbia government. [11] The restoration started in 1989 by developer Jeffrey N. Cohen, who was working on a controversial $250 million redevelopment plan, "Jackson Plaza", for the Shaw/U-Street area. [12]