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The Cowles Center for Dance and the Performing Arts (formerly the Minnesota Shubert Performing Arts and Education Center) is a performing arts center and flagship for dance in downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States. The Cowles Center was developed as an incubation project by Artspace Projects, Inc and includes the refurbished 500-seat ...
It is one of four restored theaters on Hennepin Avenue, along with the State Theatre, [2] the Pantages Theatre, and the Shubert Theatre (now The Cowles Center). The building opened on October 16, 1921, originally named the Hennepin Theater, its first performers included the Marx Brothers with more than 70,000 guests attending the opening week run.
The new performing arts center is a three-building complex that includes the renovated Shubert Theatre building (renamed the Goodale Theater) and a new glass-walled atrium connecting the two historic buildings and serving them both as a common lobby. The Cowles Center hosted a three-day Grand Opening Gala September 9–11, 2011.
Cedar Rapids: 8,600 2014 McGrath Amphitheatre 6,000 September 1, 1928 Paramount Theatre: 1,693 1951 Sinclair Auditorium: 1,100 Unknown Westfair Amphitheater Council Bluffs: 12,000 October 2002 Mid-America Center: 9,000 July 12, 2005 Wells Fargo Arena: Des Moines: 16,110 1854 Iowa State Fairgrounds: 10,605 January 1, 2019 Horizon Events Center ...
Shubert Theatre, former name of the Goodale Theater; part of the Cowles Center for Dance and the Performing Arts in Minneapolis, Minnesota; Shubert Theatre (opened 1910), former name of the Fitzgerald Theater in St. Paul, Minnesota; Shubert's Missouri Theater (demolished 1965), also known by other names including Folly Theater, in Kansas City ...
The Shubert Foundation owns The Shubert Organization. [2] It currently owns and operates 23 theaters, including 17 Broadway venues. [3] It is America's largest funder of not-for-profit theaters, dance companies, and similar. [4] [5] It hosts the annual Shubert Foundation High School Theatre Festival for New York City Public Schools. [6]
Alliant Energy PowerHouse (formerly Five Seasons Center and later U.S. Cellular Center) is a multi-purpose arena located in the downtown area of Cedar Rapids, Iowa.It was financed by the approval of a voter referendum to allocate special municipal capital improvement bond monies, after several prior bond referendums to build a civic center failed between 1965 and 1977.
The building which houses the Cedar Cultural Center was a movie theater called the Cedar Theater from 1948 until the 1970s. In 1989 the building was donated to the non-profit organization Minnesota STAR (Society for Traditional Arts and Resources) started by Deb Martin and Mary Ann Dotson.