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The Cinema Village in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic. Cinema Village is a three-screen movie theater in Greenwich Village, New York. [1] It is the oldest continuously operated cinema in Greenwich Village. It was opened in 1963, housed in a converted firehouse on 12th Street. [2]
Village East by Angelika (also Village East, originally the Louis N. Jaffe Art Theatre, and formerly known by several other names [a]) is a movie theater at 189 Second Avenue, on the corner with 12th Street, in the East Village of Manhattan in New York City.
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.
IFC Center is an art house movie theater in Greenwich Village, Manhattan, New York City. Located at 323 Sixth Avenue (Avenue of the Americas) at West 3rd Street, it was formerly the Waverly Theater, an art house movie theater.
The exterior of the theater in 2019. The Film Forum is a nonprofit movie theater at 209 West Houston Street in Greenwich Village, Manhattan, New York City.It is a four-screen cinema open 365 days a year, with 280,000 annual admissions, nearly 500 seats, 60 employees, 4,500 members, and an operating budget of $5 million.
On October 9, 2015, a new location opened in San Diego’s North County. [6] Village East by Angelika in New York City, built 1926, opened under the Angelika brand 2021; Angelika 57, an art cinema in midtown Manhattan on 57th Street between Broadway and Seventh Avenue, operated between 1993 and 1997. [7] [8]
On July 19, 2002, exactly 30 years after its world premiere in Amsterdam, Ciao! opened at New York's Cinema Village. In October 2002, Plexifilm released a special edition DVD with additional 35mm outtake footage, rare pictures and interviews with the cast and crew of the film.
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.