Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The theatre appears in the movie. Later that year in 2006, the Keith-Albee ended its run as a functioning movie theater and, after almost 80 years of ownership, the Hyman family donated it to the Marshall University Foundation, which in turn passed it over to the newly formed Keith-Albee Performing Arts Center Foundation (KAPAC).
Huntington Plaza, formerly the Huntington Trust Building, is an office building in Downtown Columbus, Ohio. It is owned by Huntington Bancshares , and is part of the Huntington Center complex, which also contains the Huntington Center skyscraper, the Huntington National Bank Building , and DoubleTree Hotel Guest Suites Columbus.
Pullman Square is a lifestyle center in downtown Huntington, West Virginia, United States between 8th and 10th Street and 3rd Avenue and Veteran's Memorial Boulevard.It is located on what was known as the Superblock, [2] a large urban renewal project that saw the demolishing of four city-square-blocks in 1970. [3]
A year and a half in the making, the luxury dine-in theater takes the place of the Pittsford Cinema 9. Skip to main content. Sign in. Mail. 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 ...
The studio behind recent films like “Bad Boys: Ride or Die” and “The Garfield Movie” has acquired the distinctive theater chain Alamo Drafthouse Cinema, the companies said Wednesday. Alamo ...
In 1937, Scott's Theatre was renamed to the Roxy Theatre. By June 1941, its name was changed to the Surf Theatre. [4] On June 27, 1944, the Surf Theatre hosted a Los Angeles War Finance Committee-sponsored set of special film screenings to promote the sale of war bonds for the American World War II effort. Purchase of a bond as part of the ...
Sony Pictures Entertainment, the Hollywood studio behind recent hits like "Bad Boys: Ride or Die" and "Anyone but You," has acquired the Alamo Drafthouse Cinema dine-in movie theater chain, the ...
The theatre was also the home of the Al Jolson show from 1936 to 1939 . [1] [2] A&P heir and arts patron Huntington Hartford bought the theatre from CBS in 1953, modernized it with design by Helen Conway, and re-opened it with 970 seats as the first legitimate theatre venue in Los Angeles in many years, [4] under the name Huntington Hartford ...