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In 1974, the theatre reopened as the "Miami Beach Theater of the Performing Arts". Providing the auditorium with theatre-style seating, the venue became the hot spot for many Broadway shows including: Gypsy (with Angela Lansbury), Timbuktu! (with Eartha Kitt) and Carousel (with Robert Goulet). During the 80s and 90s, the venue continued to boom ...
Roger Rocka's Dinner Theater – Fresno, California, dinner and a musical or play put on by the Good Company Players; Showboat Dinner Theatre – St. Petersburg, Florida, a popular Tampa Bay venue in the 1970s–1980s, featuring popular stars of stage and screen, such as Dorothy Lamour, Hayden Rorke, Cesar Romero, and Myrna Loy [7]
Previous conventions were held at the Miami Beach Convention Center. However, the business atmosphere for Miami Beach began to decline. City officials saw this as an opportunity to claim the market for the blossoming downtown business district. [1] The space, known as James L. Knight Convention Center, was the project of the City of Miami. [2]
The second-largest cinema chain in the United States is planning to close 39 movie theaters nationwide, including the South Beach theater. Regal is closing Miami Beach’s biggest movie theater ...
The Fillmore Miami Beach at the Jackie Gleason Theater on Washington Avenue and 17th Street in Miami Beach closed for a year starting June 1, 2022, to accommodate construction of the 800-room ...
From the 1950s - 1990s, it functioned back and forth as a movie house and a live performance space. [1] As of 2020, the Colony Theatre is a 417-seat performance venue [2] managed by South Florida theater company, Miami New Drama. It hosts music, dance, and theater performances as well as Miami New Drama's theatrical season. [3] The Colony ...
Following another remodeling in 2002, the Theater was turned over to Miami Dade College. Now under the auspices of Miami Film Festival. [2] In 2011, USA Today declared MDC's Tower Theater "one of the 10 great places to see a movie in splendor" in the newspaper's round-up of the best old-fashioned movie palaces in America. [3]
The Lincoln Theatre on Lincoln Road in the South Beach neighborhood of Miami Beach, Florida was a movie theater and later a concert hall. It was designed in art deco style by noted cinema and theater designer Thomas W. Lamb and opened in 1936.