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Crossroads Theatre is an American residence theater company in New Brunswick, New Jersey, focused on the Black American experience and the African diaspora. It is in residence at the newly built New Brunswick Performing Arts Center , which opened in the city's Civic Square in 2019.
The King Block, also known as the Crossroads Theater, was a historic building located on Memorial Parkway (Burnet Street) in the city of New Brunswick in Middlesex County, New Jersey, United States. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on May 26, 1988, for its significance in commerce. [3]
The New Brunswick Performing Arts Center is a complex in New Brunswick, New Jersey's Civic Square government and cultural district, adjacent to the State Theatre. [2] Construction for the US$172 million, 23-story multi-use property began in 2017 and was completed in 2019. [3] Its official opening took place September 4, 2019. [4]
It stands next to the former silent film movie palace which is now the State Theatre for performing arts. The newly built New Brunswick Performing Arts Center opened in Civic Square in 2019. [6] It hosts theater performances at Mason Gross alongside professional companies American Repertory Ballet, [7] Crossroads Theatre, [8] and George Street ...
Not long after graduating, with L. Kenneth Richardson whom he knew from graduate studies, Khan founded Crossroads Theater in New Brunswick, New Jersey, in 1978. [1] Khan and Richardson had fleshed out the idea for the company in a restaurant and wrote their mission on a napkin: To change the too-limiting environment of black theater of that day, and encourage a bolder, more real and more human ...
"There's something for all ages," Director of Operations Steve Tarantini said
[1] [2] South of New Brunswick Station, it is bounded by the city's theater district, which includes the Mason Gross School of the Arts, the State Theatre, the Crossroads Theatre and George Street Playhouse at NBPAC and the Livingston Avenue Historic District which includes the Henry Guest House and the Willow Grove Cemetery. [3] [4] [5] [6]
After the world premiere at the Crossroads Theater in New Brunswick, the play was performed at the historic Ford's Theater in Washington, D.C., in September 2012, [6] as the second production in a special multi-year "Lincoln Legacy Project," "an effort to create dialogue around the issues of tolerance, equality, and acceptance."