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The Playhouse Theatre was a Broadway theater at 137 West 48th Street in midtown Manhattan, New York City. Charles A. Rich was the architect. It was built in 1911 for producer William A. Brady who also owned the nearby 48th Street Theatre. After 1944, it was sold to the Shubert Organization. From 1949 to 1952, it was an ABC Radio studio.
Audience members enter “Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club” through an alleyway, walking past trash cans overflowing with garbage and debris (“That’s not a prop,” Tom Scutt, the show’s ...
On September 26, Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club welcomed some new nightcrawlers to its retinue. The hit Broadway show refreshed several of its leading roles, ushering in Adam Lambert as the Emcee ...
[110] [111] Produced by Underbelly and Ambassador Theatre Group, [112] and billed as Cabaret at the Kit Kat Club, the production began previews November 15, 2021 at Playhouse Theatre, which was reduced to a 550-seat capacity with an intimate in-the-round stage and table seating for some audience members, in effect transforming the theater into ...
Kit-Cat Club, an early 18th-century English club in London with strong political and literary associations, whose name derives from "Kit Kats" mutton pies; Kit Kat Club, a New York City cabaret venue, now Stephen Sondheim Theatre; Kit Kat Club, a 1920s London nightclub, in the later Odeon Haymarket; KitKatClub, a Berlin night club opened in 1994
The origin of the name "Kit-Cat Club" is unclear. In 1705 Thomas Hearne wrote: "The Kit Cat Club got its name from Christopher Catling. [Note, a Pudding Pye man.]" Other sources give his surname as Catt (or some variant such as Cat or Katt): John Timbs (Club Life of London), Ophelia Field (The Kit-Kat Club), John Macky (A Journey Through England).