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Cathay Theatre: Cathay Cinema: 870 Huaihai Middle Road: 1932: 11: C-III-006: Lyceum Theatre: Lyceum Theatre: 57 South Maoming Road: 1931: 12: G-III-003: Former Municipal Museum: Second Military Medical University (Main Building) 174 Changhai Road: 1936: 13: F-III-011: Hongkou Fire Station: Hongkou Fire Brigade: 560 Wusong Road: 1915: 14: G-III ...
Charles Henry Gonda (22 June 1889 – 1 April 1969), professionally known as C. H. Gonda, was a Hungarian architect famous for his ultra-modern style of building.He was active in Shanghai throughout the 1920s–1940s and began working on his first project, the Messrs, Lane, Crawford & Co's New Frontage building, in 1922 after leaving his previous firm Probst, Hanbury & Co..
Cathay, North Dakota, United States; Cathays, a district of Cardiff, the capital of Wales; Cathay Theatre , a historical landmark movie theatre in Shanghai; In media: Cathay (poetry collection), a book of poems by Ezra Pound; Cathay (Warhammer), a fictional nation in Games Workshop's Warhammer Fantasy universe; Other: Cathay Bank, a Chinese ...
Shanghai Opera Theater; T. Tianchan Theatre This page was last edited on 22 March 2020, at 17:52 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
The first Cathay Cinema was located at the Cathay Building on 2 Handy Road, Singapore. It was the first air-conditioned cinema building in Singapore, opening on 3 October 1939 with the film The Four Feathers. [2] The cinema had a seating capacity of 1,321 and ancillary spaces such as a women's lounge and a spacious lounge bar. [3]
The venue was originally founded as Golden Theatre in 1973, the biggest cinema at the time in Singapore and Malaysia, [5] with a single hall that sat up to 1,500 people. [7] In 1990s, the venue was split into 3 halls. [8] Eventually in 2014, Golden Theatre retained the largest 1,000-seats hall, while The Projector took over the smaller halls. [8]
The theatre was designed by Ladislav Hudec and completed in 1933. [1] In 2013, Time Out Shanghai said of the venue: "Known to foreigners as 'the best cinema of the Far East', the Grand Cinema was frequented by Shanghai's glitterati in its 1930s heyday ... [It] was completed in 1933 and was the height of technological innovation – each seat ...
Shanghai Dramatic Arts Centre (Chinese: 上海话剧艺术中心; pinyin: Shànghǎi Huàjù Yìshù Zhōngxīn) is a professional theatrical company based in Shanghai, China, founded on January 23, 1995 after the merger of Shanghai's two largest theatres, the Shanghai People's Art Theatre (上海人民艺术剧院) and the Shanghai Youth Drama Troupe (上海青年话剧团). [1]