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  2. Beautiful Thing (play) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beautiful_Thing_(play)

    The story is set in Thamesmead, a working class area of South East London dominated by post-war council estates. [2] [3]Jamie, a teen who is infatuated with his classmate, Steve, has to deal with his single mother Sandra, who is preoccupied with ambitious plans to run her own pub and with an ever-changing string of lovers, the latest of whom is Tony, a neo-hippie.

  3. Film Guild Cinema - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Film_Guild_Cinema

    The Film Guild Cinema was a movie house designed by notable architectural theoretician and De Stijl member, Frederick Kiesler (earlier designs by Eugene De Rosa). [1] It was located at 52 W. 8th St. in Greenwich Village, New York City. It was built in 1929. It was renamed the 8th Street Playhouse a year later.

  4. Greenwich Theatre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenwich_Theatre

    At the beginning of the 19th century, Richardson's travelling theatre made its annual tented appearance during the famous Eastertide Greenwich Fair.In Sketches by Boz, Charles Dickens reminisced enthusiastically, "you have a melodrama (with three murders and a ghost), a pantomime, a comic song, an overture, and some incidental music, all done in five-and-twenty minutes."

  5. Greenwich Village Theatre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenwich_Village_Theatre

    Greenwich Village Theatre (GVT) was an arts venue in Greenwich Village, New York which opened in 1917 and closed for the last time in 1930. Herman Lee Meader was the architect and it was located in Sheridan Square at 4th Street and Seventh Avenue. It was an intimate theatre that seated 450, and is no longer extant.

  6. Quad Cinema - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quad_Cinema

    From 1972 to 1988 the theater was operated by Bernard Goldberg, executive vice-president of Golden Theatre Management, operator of the Quad and six other New York City houses. [5] The theater exhibited Hollywood films , independent films , and revivals of older films, but had difficulty obtaining the most attractive releases due to the ...

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  8. Dragonwyck (film) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dragonwyck_(film)

    Dragonwyck is a 1946 American period drama film made by Twentieth Century-Fox. [4] [5] It was directed by Joseph L. Mankiewicz, and produced by Darryl F. Zanuck and Ernst Lubitsch (uncredited), from a screenplay by Mankiewicz, based on the novel Dragonwyck by Anya Seton.

  9. Garrick Cinema - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garrick_Cinema

    The Garrick Cinema (periodically referred to as the New Andy Warhol Garrick Theatre, Andy Warhol's Garrick Cinema, Garrick Theatre, or Nickelodeon) was a 199-seat movie house [4] at 152 Bleecker Street in the Greenwich Village neighborhood of Lower Manhattan in New York City.