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Empire Theatre (42nd Street)

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its plasterwork. The theater's facade was cleaned, while the interior was adapted to become the lobby of the AMC multiplex. Midway through the project, Forest City Ratner decided to add a 455-room hotel above the new entertainment and retail spaces to the east. The hotel was built atop a large truss, which in turn was supported by reinforced-concrete walls and eight large steel columns, since the hotel was structurally separate from the rest of the development. The large size of the steel columns required the architects to slightly reduce the size of the AMC multiplex.
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The former auditorium comprises the first two stories, while the concession stand is on the third story. The movie screens are spread across five stories, connected by 14 escalators. The multiplex contains an additional six mezzanines, which are connected by elevators. In addition to the proscenium arch, other decorative details remain intact within the multiplex's lobby. A portion of the AMC multiplex is located on a truss above the original Empire Theatre building, which measures 20 feet (6.1 m) deep and is placed 60 feet (18 m) above ground level.
708: 1282:. The Brandt family planned to submit a bid to redevelop some of the theaters they owned on 42nd Street. In June 1982, the Brandts' five theaters on the north side of 42nd Street were added to the redevelopment plan. Despite the Brandts' insistence that the Empire and Liberty theaters also be included in the redevelopment, the two theaters were leased to New York Mart Inc. as part of a separate plan. Ultimately, the 42nd Street Redevelopment Project was delayed for several years due to lawsuits and disputes concerning the towers. 1286:
plan, the Empire and Liberty theaters would be renovated, although the extent of the renovations was unclear. David Morse and Richard Reinis were selected in April 1982 to develop the mart, but they were removed from the project that November due to funding issues. Subsequently, the state and city disputed over the replacement development team, leading the city to withdraw from the partnership in August 1983. The state and city reached a compromise on the development team that October, wherein the mart would be developed by
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would undermine the building's structural integrity. Workers installed piles on the adjacent lots to the west, which had previously contained residences with basements. The basements were demolished, allowing the theater building to rest directly on Manhattan's bedrock instead of atop an unstable layer of dirt. There were 430 piles in total, which supported a set of eight parallel tracks. Workers also poured 70 concrete caps inside the theater building. After the tracks had been installed, workers placed a
1341: 772:. Two of the screening rooms include leather seats, which were intended for large gatherings such as business presentations and private parties. In addition, there is a private 60-seat screening room that can be rented out for events. In total, the multiplex had 34 plasma screens and seven projectors when it opened; some of the screens were located within the lobby. When the theater opened, all of its screening rooms contained digital audio systems. 1129:
the licenses revoked. The nearby Republic and other theaters had been raided by police, but these actions only boosted the theaters' popularity. The Eltinge's operating license was temporarily revoked in September 1932, only to reopen the next month. The Eltinge toned down its shows whenever it was raided, but reverted to form soon after. By 1933, Rudnick had taken over the theater building, and Woods relocated his office to the New Amsterdam.
1145:. The theater operated without a permit for several weeks in late 1937 before its license was renewed at the end of that year. Even without burlesque on its marquee, the Eltinge remained popular, although it was only one of three remaining burlesque theaters in the city by 1940. Moss again refused to renew the Eltinge's operating license in early 1942, marking the permanent end of burlesque at the Eltinge. 1234:
December 1979 as part of a proposal to restore West 42nd Street around Times Square. Under the plan, five theaters would have been converted back to legitimate use, and the facades of three other theaters, including the Empire, would be restored. The Empire's small capacity made it unsuitable as a legitimate theater, so the interior was likely to be demolished and renovated into a restaurant. Mayor
1212:. The Brandts' theaters had a combined annual gross of about $ 2 million and operated nearly the entire day. However, the area was in decline; the Brandts' theaters only had three million visitors in 1977, about half of the number in 1963. The Brandts' movie theaters on 42nd Street continued to operate through the mid-1980s, at which point the Empire was showing kung-fu and horror films. 1322:. Government officials hoped that the development of the theaters would finally allow the construction of the four towers around 42nd Street, Broadway, and Seventh Avenue. Even though the Empire Theatre was abandoned, government officials continued to heat the theater to preserve the plasterwork. The exterior of the unused theater was used as the Pandora Theater for the film 1410:
cost. In its first year of operation, the Empire 25 struggled to compete with the E-Walk; it had not screened many major films in part because of a lack of successful feature films. By 2001, the Empire 25 had become one of the most popular in the world, grossing over $ 500,000 a week. The Times Square Cafe opened on the multiplex's balcony level in 2001 and later closed.
1389:" comedy routine, were placed along the construction fence to mark the move's progress. Two portable heaters continued to heat the empty auditorium as it was being relocated. The event attracted several hundred spectators. Until 2022, the 3,700-short-ton (3,300-long-ton; 3,400 t) structure was the heaviest building in New York City to have been relocated. 1433:
it offered independent and art films in addition to major features. Because of varying patronage throughout the week, the number of employees varied widely, from 20 workers on a typical weekday to nearly 140 during the summer. AMC also rented out the Empire 25's space for various events, such as a showcase of 3D films and an experimental-music festival.
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a cost of $ 1.2 million, using tracks to move the structure. AMC finalized its lease the same month. According to New 42nd Street president Cora Cahan, news articles about the proposed relocation were largely "filled with wonder", in contrast to the mostly negative characterizations of Times Square. Urban Foundations was hired to relocate the building.
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the theater was tentatively slated to be used for fashion shows and other events, the city and state governments had not reached an agreement with private developers regarding the mart. The merchandise mart was ultimately never built; the northern part of the site became 11 Times Square, while the southern part became the New York Times Building.
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discussion of the landmark designations was delayed for several decades. In late 2015, the LPC hosted public hearings on whether to designate the Empire and six other theaters as landmarks. The LPC rejected the designations in February 2016 because the theaters were already subject to historic-preservation regulations set by the state government.
963:, which opened in 1920, was the theater's first hit of that decade, running for nearly a year. In July 1921, Samuel Augenblick and Louis B. Brodsky bought the Liberty and Eltinge theaters from the heirs of Charlotte M. Goodridge, although this had no effect on Woods's lease. Later the same year, the theater hosted 618:. The Empire 25 is part of a larger retail and entertainment complex on the south side of 42nd Street, which covers 335,000 square feet (31,100 m). The theater itself covers 140,000 square feet (13,000 m) and was New York City's largest multiplex movie theater at the time of its construction. 1432:
reported in 2011 that the Empire 25 had two million guests per year or an average of 40,000 guests per week. By contrast, the average multiplex in the United States had a third as many visitors. The Empire 25's success was attributed not only to its central location near Times Square but also because
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wanted to develop a similarly ornate gateway for AMC on the western end of the site. Forest City Ratner was not permitted to destroy or dismantle the Empire, which was protected by historic-preservation regulations. In June 1996, Ratner proposed relocating the theater 170 feet (52 m) westward at
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The New York Mart plan consisted of a garment merchandise mart on Eighth Avenue between 40th and 42nd Streets, opposite Port Authority Bus Terminal. The project was to be completed by the Times Square Redevelopment Corporation, comprising members of the New York state and city governments. Under this
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bought a 50-percent stake in Woods's lease. As part of the agreement, all productions staged at the Eltinge Theatre also had to be presented at one of the Shubert family's theaters. The Shubert family withdrew from the theater's operation in February 1926, leaving Woods with complete control over the
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After the theater was relocated, Forest City Ratner planned to recreate stonework on the facade, which at several places had been stripped to a layer of brick. At the time of the relocation, its interior was in poor condition, with peeling paint and missing boxes, but the auditorium retained most of
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of steel beams above the tracks, which in turn traveled above a series of 250 rollers. The perimeter of the dolly contained load-bearing beams that supported the weight of the theater. The lowest portions of the walls were removed, detaching the theater from the original foundations. The theater was
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The Brandts leased all their movie theaters on 42nd Street, including the Empire, to the Cine 42nd Street Corporation in 1986. Cine 42nd Street subleased the theater to Sweetheart Theatres Inc., which screened pornographic movies. The Empire Theatre was still part of the mart project in 1987. Though
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The Eltinge and the Republic were financially successful by mid-1931, but local business owners opposed burlesque, claiming that the shows encouraged loitering, crime and decreased property values. In New York, theater licenses were subject to yearly renewal, and opponents of burlesque tried to have
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of the theater is composed of a steel frame with brick walls measuring 18 inches (460 mm) thick. The Eltinge Theatre could not contain interior columns because they would obstruct audience members' sightlines, so the side walls and the ceiling were designed to be stronger and more rigid than in
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The square facade of the Empire Theatre is made of terracotta and has little ornamentation compared with other theaters built around the same time. The center of the facade contains a three-story arch, which originally illuminated the rear of the auditorium. The arch was intended to resemble a Roman
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The AMC Empire 25 opened in April 2000, being the second multiplex to open on the block, after the E-Walk complex. Theatrical insiders claimed that the Empire 25 had cost $ 70 million, which might have made it the most expensive movie theater ever built, but AMC refused to disclose the construction
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Engineers were preparing to raze several buildings along the south side of 42nd Street by mid-1997, including the Lew Fields Theatre, whose site would be occupied by the relocated Empire. The rear of the theater was braced because workers had to remove the stage and the fly systems, and the removal
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The LPC started to consider protecting theaters, including the Empire Theatre, with discussions continuing over the next several years. While the LPC granted landmark status to many Broadway theaters starting in 1987, it deferred decisions on the exterior and interior of the Empire Theatre. Further
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that had just been demolished. By the late 1950s, the Empire was classified as a "reissue house", displaying reruns of films and changing its offerings twice a week. Tickets cost 25 to 65 cents apiece, the cheapest admission scale for any theater on 42nd Street. The Empire and the other 42nd Street
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When the theater building was repurposed in 1998, the steeply-raked balcony levels were replaced with mezzanines that contained restaurants. Escalators pass through the former proscenium arch to the newer multiplex screens above. There are three levels of lobbies, which lead to the screening rooms.
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In the original design, there were four pairs of doors at ground level, underneath a steel-and-glass marquee that protruded onto the sidewalk. Both the entrance and the stage door were on 42nd Street, in contrast to other theaters along the same block (including the New Amsterdam and Harris), which
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The 42nd Street Company was established in 1961 to operate the Brandts' seven theaters on 42nd Street. By the early 1960s, the surrounding block had decayed, but many of the old theater buildings from the block's heyday remained, including the Empire. Martin Levine and Richard Brandt took over the
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began a crackdown on burlesque and appointed Paul Moss as license commissioner. Rudnick, his assistant manager, and several performers were arrested on indecency charges in November 1934, but were ultimately exonerated. The Eltinge continued to operate as a burlesque house for several more years.
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William Brandt said in 1953 that any of his 42nd Street theaters could be converted into a legitimate house within 24 hours' notice, but producers did not take up his offer. Brandt announced in August 1953 that he would renovate the Laff-Movie, showing feature films exclusively. The theater was
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Woods leased the Eltinge in March 1927 to Lester Bryant, who was sponsored by a group of wealthy men. By then, Woods was producing multiple large shows, which the theater's small capacity could not accommodate. The Lambert Theatre Corporation, a venture in which Bryant was a partner, leased the
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hosted an exhibition with photographs of the Empire and other theaters to advocate for the area's restoration. One plan for the site, in 1978, called for razing several buildings in the area, including the Empire, to create a park. Another plan, called the City at 42nd Street, was announced in
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Woods subleased the Eltinge Theatre to Max Rudnick in February 1931; Woods continued to occupy the fourth-floor offices, as his lease did not expire for another two years. Rudnick converted the Eltinge into a stock burlesque theater, and launched his first burlesque shows there on March 6. The
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The theater had 750 seats on three levels. These were proportioned in "slender", "medium", and "stout" widths for patrons of different sizes. The side walls were steeply angled to give the impression that the auditorium was larger than it actually was. The auditorium was decorated with ancient
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operated by the Brandt family and leased to J.J. Mage. The Brandts renamed the theater the Empire in 1954 and continued to present movies there until the late 20th century. The city and state governments of New York acquired the theater as part of the 42nd Street Redevelopment Project in 1990.
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The firm of Mandelbaum & Lewine, along with Max N. Natanson, bought the Liberty and Eltinge theaters in November 1923 and immediately resold the theaters to Maximilian Zipkes. The Eltinge continued to host plays, although they were often not very popular. In early 1925, the theater hosted
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was planning a $ 150 million entertainment and retail complex on the site of the Empire, Harris, and Liberty theaters. Madame Tussauds and AMC leased space in the complex that July. Madame Tussauds would occupy the eastern section of the site, using the entrance of the former Harris Theatre;
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The theater's relocation required several months of preparation. The entire relocation was supposed to have occurred on February 17, 1998, but this was postponed because New York City officials wanted to perform the relocation on a weekend. As such, the structure was initially moved 30 feet
331:. In its early years, the Eltinge was known as a "lucky house", with many long-running plays. The theater was less successful during the 1920s and was leased to various theatrical personalities. During the Depression, when legitimate productions were scarce, the Eltinge was leased for 956:
The Eltinge did not host many long-lasting productions during the 1920s, likely because of the growing popularity of larger theaters and because Woods was busy producing other shows. With only 829 seats in 1919, the Eltinge was smaller than most of the area's other theaters. The play
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Eltinge during the 1927–1928 theatrical season, hosting seven shows in eight months. Louis I. Isquith leased the theater during mid-1928, presenting a series of plays with low ticket prices. Woods subsequently took back the theater's lease and produced the revue
1381:(9.1 m) on February 22, while the rest of the relocation occurred during a five-hour period on March 1. Hydraulic jacks moved the theater in five-minute bursts, moving the theater about 5 feet (1.5 m) during each burst. Two large balloons representing 900:
opened at the Eltinge in August 1916, with 286 performances over the next several months. Within five years of its opening, the Eltinge Theatre was known as a "lucky house", in part because Woods often booked or produced popular comedies and melodramas.
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The facade of the Empire Theatre is made of terracotta and is square in shape, with relatively little ornamentation compared to other theaters of the time. The center of the facade contains a three-story arch, which was intended to resemble a Roman
744:, the women depicted in the mural may have been based on different outfits Eltinge wore. The auditorium contains a domed ceiling. There was originally a chandelier hanging from the center of the ceiling, but it was removed in the 1930s. 862:. The drama had previously been successful in Chicago, and it ran at the Eltinge for 541 performances through the end of 1913. Many of the Eltinge's early productions were similarly successful. The next hit at the Eltinge was the play 1190:
theaters on the north side of 42nd Street, as well as the Laff-Movie and the Liberty Theatre on the south side. Several producers offered to stage legitimate productions in the Brandt theaters, but none of the offers were successful.
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The multiplex remained one of the United States' most profitable movie theaters in the mid-2000s. It was especially popular on holiday weekends; for instance, it hosted 131 screenings of 14 separate films on Christmas Day in 2009.
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acquired the leases to eight theaters in Times Square, including the Empire. It subsequently announced plans to renovate the eight theaters in February 1990. The New York state government acquired the theater sites that April via
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After the Eltinge's burlesque license expired, J. J. Mage leased the theater from the Brandts. Mage reopened the Eltinge as the Laff-Movie in July 1942, with 759 seats. The new name reflected the fact that it showed only comedic
645:, the facade was typical of Lamb's 1910s theater designs, which "emphasized broad swaths of cream- or white-colored glazed terra cotta with a bit of polychromy and deep dramatic piers, window recesses and other large elements". 799:
signed a contract in 1909, wherein Woods acted as Eltinge's manager for seven years. Both men earned several hundred thousand dollars from the contract. Eltinge, who gained fame as a female impersonator, never performed there.
1270:(UDC), an agency of the New York state government, proposed redeveloping the area around a portion of West 42nd Street in 1981. The plan centered around four towers that were to be built at 42nd Street's intersections with 724:
each. The boxes stepped down toward the stage, and the fronts of each box were decorated with sculpted medallions, flanked by sculpted figures. The boxes were removed in the 1930s when the theater was converted into a
3675:"The Yellow Ticket' With a Star Cast: Good Acting in a Very Uneven and Rather Clumsy Melodrama Russian Variation of the White Slave Play With the Russian Police Foiled by the Girl and a Dashing American Journalist". 7986: 12217: 9208: 7353:
Reed, Henry Hope Jr. (October 28, 1962). "Beneath the Squalor, Yesterday's Glamor: the Names of the Astaires, of Barrymore and Belasco, Lawrence and Lillie, Cling to the Cheap Movie Houses of 42nd Street".
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Allen, Kelcey (November 12, 1923). ""Spring Cleaning" At Eltinge Scores With Quiet Humor: Comedy Marked by Amusing Situations and Brilliant Dialogue—Byron, Violet Heining and Estelle Winwood Act Well".
8301: 384:. The theater was originally located at 236–242 West 42nd Street, but it has been moved 168 feet (51 m) west of its original location. The Empire's modern-day site was formerly occupied by the 322:
depicting three dancing women. Most of the original detail was restored when the theater building was repurposed in 1998. The former auditorium serves as a lobby and lounge for the AMC Empire 25.
8008: 3219: 1314:. The city had planned to buy out the theaters' leases but withdrew after the 42nd Street Company indicated it would lease the theaters to another developer. Although Durst protested the move, a 1170:
to call the block the "biggest movie center of the world". The Brandt family operated seven of these theaters, while the Cinema circuit operated the other three. The Brandt theaters included the
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stone facade. The original water table was removed when the theater was relocated in 1998. The second and third floors are mostly devoid of ornamentation. The center of the arch is topped by a
7947: 7186: 6632: 6319:"42d Street Rises In Moral Wrath At Burlesque: Banks, Business Firms and Legitimate Theaters Protest at License Hearing Vice Open, Says Priest Property and Loan Values Held Sharply Affected". 6047: 6453:"Two Burlesque Houses Closed Pending Appeal: Justice Shientag to Hear Mandamus Action Today for Republic and Eltinge 13 Mothers Visit McKee Protest in Vain at Ban on Children in 'Vanities'". 6431: 6381: 6085: 4490: 3494: 928:, which opened in September 1918; it ran for several months despite having only two performers, in contrast to many contemporary productions that enjoyed large casts. The Eltinge also hosted 7091: 6500: 8969: 7430: 6670: 3976: 318:; a fourth story was used for offices. The theater had about 900 seats in its auditorium, spread across three levels. It was decorated with ancient Egyptian and Greek details, as well as a 6297: 6205: 4638: 2223: 1385:, who first performed together at the theater in 1935, were rigged to appear as if they were dragging the theater westward. Large construction markers, referencing Abbott and Costello's " 841:
theaters. The George A. Just Company received the contract for the theater's structural steel, while the Fleischmann Brothers received the general construction contract. By January 1912,
764:, with each row being 18 inches (460 mm) higher than the one in front of it. The rooms each contain up to 600 seats. On the sixth story are seven smaller screens, which are used for 6522:"Burlesque Back On 42d Street, Face Washed: City Renews Republic and Eltinge Licenses, Nude Posters Are Eliminated Productions Are 'Revues' But It's Same Old Show, Minsky Manager Says". 12365: 9047: 9008: 5726: 11370: 11264: 11138: 5916: 8153: 4449: 11189: 8541: 4212: 825:. Woods planned to build a 1,000-seat theater named in honor of Julian Eltinge. It would be the eighth theater to be constructed on 42nd Street, after the New Amsterdam, Liberty, 7924: 2454: 795:
during the first decade of the 20th century. From 1901 to 1920, forty-three theaters were built around Broadway in Midtown Manhattan. Furthermore, A. H. Woods and American actor
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theaters, occupied the north side. These venues were mostly converted to movie theaters by the 1930s, and many of them had been relegated to showing pornography by the 1970s.
8750: 5586:"Takes Eltinge Theatre; L.I. Isquith to Give New Plays This Summer at $ 2 Top Price. Throng Again Greets Toscanini. Alba Nardone Plays Again. New Sunday Night Entertainments" 11325: 5030: 4352: 4032: 3732: 12611: 10136: 9480: 8595: 8502: 5972: 5375: 3897: 3037: 11998: 10189: 8262: 3621: 8424: 9288: 7978: 7740: 5281: 4803: 4577: 4296: 9711: 7698: 7531: 1141:
ordered all burlesque houses to remove the word "burlesque" from their marquees that June. The Eltinge continued to host burlesque performances, which were billed as
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theaters operated from 8 a.m. to 3 a.m., with three shifts of workers. The ten theaters on the block attracted about five million visitors a year between them.
9399: 4844: 2363: 8863: 12355: 11681: 8285: 7607: 611: 8820: 7791: 7569: 3841: 339:, then burlesque comedians, first performed together at the Eltinge early in 1935. After its tenure as a burlesque house, the Eltinge became the Laff-Movie 11962: 11244: 9750: 6258:
Pihodna, Joe (January 21, 1951). "30 Theaters a Far Cry From Abundant Old Days: But They're Enough to Fill Our Needs, People Claim, Despite TV's Inroads".
4599:"Liberty and Eltinge Theaters Bought By Operators: Samuel Augenblick and Louis B. Brodsky Also Buy 500 Riverdale Lots From the Estate of C. M. Goodridge". 7645: 12375: 10947: 1275: 472: 9928: 11421: 8016: 7209: 5654: 5585: 4716: 2058: 9169: 6930: 6766: 5704: 5303: 4958: 4377: 3922: 3769: 3343: 3241: 1104:, produced by Richard G. Herndon, which closed in February 1931. By then, there were rumors that the Eltinge could be converted to a movie theater or 11164: 11053: 7170: 6804: 6616: 6594: 6031: 4427: 1448:
Productions are listed by the year of their first performance. This list only includes Broadway shows; it does not include burlesque shows or films.
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The screening rooms originally had 4,916 seats in total, although this had been reduced to 4,764 seats by 2011. Each of the 25 rooms contains a
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Hummler, Richard (April 7, 1982). "Legitimate: Name Nederlander To Convert New Amsterdam, Harris, 42d St.; Brandt Firm Is Still Negotiating".
3201: 1166:, in December 1944. By the mid-1940s, the ten theaters along 42nd Street between Seventh and Eighth Avenues were all showing movies; this led 388:, which was demolished in 1997. The theater is part of an entertainment and retail complex at 234 West 42nd Street, which includes the former 12591: 12586: 12298: 8192: 7452:
McDonough, Jimmy (December 11, 1985). "New York Entertainment: 42d St. Grindhouses: Alternative Outlet For Dusty Subruns Facing Extinction".
5052:"Syndicate buys Two Theaters In 42d Street: Eltinge and Liberty Playhouses, Assessed at $ 1,105,000, Sold by Goodridge Family to Operators". 4330: 4010: 3819: 3710: 845:
magazine reported that the Eltinge Theatre was nearly completed and was ready to open that April. Woods moved his executive offices from the
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had their stage doors on 41st Street. On either side of the main entrance, the lowest section of the ground-level facade contained a granite
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arch decorated with sphinxes and winged disks. The proscenium was flanked by smaller arches, each of which contained two levels with two
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conducted a report on 42nd Street's theaters in 1980. His report, in conjunction with a movement opposing the demolition of the nearby
636: 9115: 8350: 8039: 5908: 1837:, which weighed 7,000 short tons (6,200 long tons; 6,400 t), was raised by about 30 feet (9.1 m) from January to April 2022. 1440:. The theater reopened in March 2021 after being dark for nearly a year. The Empire 25 remains AMC's flagship multiplex in the 2020s. 9959: 5813: 1871: 85: 8734: 8447: 12308: 12303: 11274: 6032:"Rialto Gossip; Two More Theatres to Pass?--Affairs on the Bayes Roof—A Possible Revival of "Show Boat"--Sundry Broadway Gleanings" 2978:
Barbour, David; French, Liz (July 2000). "Nasdaq marketSite: Times Square greets the digital age in a new themed/broadcast venue".
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The 42nd Street Development Corporation had been formed in 1976 to discuss plans for redeveloping Times Square. The same year, the
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In August 1911, Woods announced that he had signed a 21-year lease for an 80-by-100-foot (24 by 30 m) plot just west of the
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films". The other six theaters showed a variety of genres, though Levine said none of the company's 42nd Street theaters showed
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above the proscenium arch contained a mural, which depicted three robed women dancing to music and was painted by French artist
12137: 11414: 10927: 8486: 5964: 5523:"Eltinge Theater Lease Passes to Young Producer: Syndicate Backing Bryant in $ 75,000 a Year Deal With Woods, Broadway Hears". 5367: 5022: 3889: 792: 10181: 8408: 8246: 7171:"Brandt Assembles Big Theatre Plot in Times Sq. Area; Five Buildings May Give Way to a Tall New Structure Under Pending Deals" 3613: 12380: 12360: 12288: 10354: 10283: 10228: 9272: 7724: 3213: 2106: 2101: 1920: 1332:
committed to restoring the New Amsterdam Theatre in 1994, most of the other theaters around 42nd Street were quickly leased.
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on 41st and 42nd Streets, with a frontage of 270 feet (82 m) on 41st Street and 350 feet (110 m) on 42nd Street.
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Walsh, Thomas (April 27, 1990). "42nd St. Project Earns OK For Condemnation And Restoration Of Area's Historic Theatres".
6868:"Girl Shows Ask For Right to Use Burlesque Title: Unions Join Operators in Appeal to LaGuardia, Citing Drop in Business". 973:
was the subject of a lengthy legal dispute regarding whether it was an "indecent" show, which Woods ultimately won. After
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The Empire 25, along with other movie theaters in New York state, was temporarily closed during much of 2020 due to the
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theaters (combined into the current Lyric Theatre), as well as the Times Square, Victory, Selwyn (now Todd Haimes), and
11556: 11284: 10476: 9089: 8927: 8108: 7826: 6366:"Prepare New Attack on Burlesque Shows; 42d St. Owners Seek to Have Licenses Revoked, Indecency Charges Having Failed" 5844: 3516:"Jane Cowl's Success: Eltinge's Theatre Opens With a New Play "Within the Law" an Interesting Melodrama, Well Acted". 12631: 12606: 11407: 10942: 10331: 10065: 9508: 9234: 6899:"Moss Orders Two Burlesque Houses Closed: Applications for Renewal of Licenses by 42d Street Theaters Are Rejected". 6485:"Burlesque Shows Reopen as 'Revues'; Dances Complained Of Remain at Houses That Got Licenses After McKee Closed Them" 5420: 5304:"Triumph for Actors in 'Stolen Fruit'; Ann Harding Leads With a Superb Performance in Play From Italian of Niccodemi" 4892: 2953: 2016: 1728: 1067: 501: 11299: 9383: 7210:"Movie Man Scoffs at Playhouse Jam; Brandt Invites Bookings at 42d St. Theatres at Guarantee – 'The Bat' Fluttering" 4828: 2347: 699:
a conventional building. Above the auditorium was Woods's office, which had green carpets and walnut-paneled walls.
12596: 11541: 11159: 11098: 10902: 9774:"New York City Cinemas Reopen Today After A Year; What To Expect As Tickets On Sale From 'Raya' To 'Tenet'- Update" 8843: 6767:"Burlesque' Bows in Its New Attire; Old Label and Risque Features Are Gone, but Audiences Find the Flavor Familiar" 3923:"Fair and Warmer' is Highly Diverting; Miss Kennedy and Mr. Cumberland Make Much of a Naughty Farce at the Eltinge" 3408: 3124: 2245: 1574: 1138: 943: 525: 519: 513: 507: 495: 489: 483: 477: 412: 9313: 7591: 668:
The fourth story contains six recessed rectangular windows, which overlooked the offices of the theater's manager
12636: 12544: 12107: 12102: 11852: 11571: 11254: 11219: 11194: 11184: 11174: 11083: 11058: 10892: 10882: 10419: 10022: 8804: 7775: 7553: 7113:"Extends Holdings in Times Sq. Area: Theatre Group Now Controls Half of Frontage in 42d and 43d Street' Blocks". 6190:"Minsky Plans to Open Burlesque Circuit; Thirty Theatres in Key Cities Between New York and Chicago to Be Linked" 3833: 2753:"No final curtain for New York theater: A 1912 landmark takes on new role as the lobby of a 25-screen cineplex". 686:. The modern multiplex contains a five-story glass facade that rises above the original Empire Theatre's facade. 602:, it was AMC's first theater in New York City. The AMC Empire 25 complex was designed by a joint venture between 17: 9734: 6282:"Civic Groups Rush 42d St. Clean-up; Many Leaders Unite in Attack Against License Renewals for Burlesque Houses" 2110: 12283: 12092: 11942: 11239: 11048: 11028: 11018: 10952: 10897: 10610: 10501: 7629: 6617:"Nine Are Arrested in Raid on Burlesque; Manager and Aide and Seven Women Performers Seized at Eltinge Theatre" 3770:"Sheldon Play Has Cumulative Force; His Staging of "The Song of Songs" Develops Into a Variation of "Camille."" 3479:"Within the Law' a Vivid Melodrama; An Injured Shop Girl's Fight for Justice Told Excitingly in Veiller's Play" 1834: 124: 12262: 9871: 348:
developed an entertainment and retail complex on the site in the 1990s, relocating and renovating the Empire.
12232: 12162: 12087: 11771: 11204: 11063: 10827: 10729: 9920: 4717:"Woods Wins Suit Over 'Demi-Virgin'; Appellate Division Reverses Supreme Court's Refusal to Enjoin Gilchrist" 1742: 1089: 631:. It is surrounded by an ornately carved frame. The outermost sections of the facade are slightly projecting 603: 10274:
The Story of 42nd Street: The Theatres, Shows, Characters, and Scandals of the World's Most Notorious Street
7076:"Brandt Acquires 2 More Theatres; Adds the Liberty and Eltinge on West 42d St. Through Holding Co. Purchase" 1377:
inch (3.2 mm) so it could be hoisted onto the dolly. Workers used hydraulic jacks to lift the theater.
12492: 11806: 11731: 11309: 11229: 11088: 11003: 10907: 10887: 10709: 9153: 5696: 1560: 1196: 1175: 934: 563: 78: 9628:
Monahan, Rachel; Goldsmith, Samuel (December 26, 2009). "It's a Marquee Day for Busiest Theater in U.S.".
7382:
Albarino, Richard (July 18, 1973). "'Main Drag' Of U.S.A.--42d Street; 5,000,000 Cheapie Tickets Yearly".
6578: 4419: 325:
Woods leased the site in August 1911, and the Eltinge Theatre opened on September 11, 1912, with the play
12567: 12529: 12416: 12132: 11978: 11906: 11746: 11616: 11561: 11516: 11511: 11335: 11169: 11118: 10541: 10388: 9193:"In Times Square, Keepers of the Glitz;3 Women Overseeing Block's Rebirth Promise to Return Its Splendor" 4182: 3033: 1401: 1226: 456: 452: 373: 275: 243: 120: 11179: 8690:
Walsh, Thomas (February 9, 1990). "New Plans For 42nd St. Theatres Arrive, & So Does A New Battle".
8652: 5886: 3961:"Cheating Cheaters Most Entertaining; Happiest Attempt at Mixing Farce and Melodrama Since "Seven Keys"" 2650:"Commercial Property/A 1912 Playhouse on 42d Street; 3,700-Ton Theater to Move to New Role, and Address" 12447: 12293: 11952: 11947: 11837: 11796: 11781: 11736: 11521: 10735: 10674: 10551: 10412: 10399: 5791: 1911: 654: 650: 550:
were built within one block of West 42nd Street between Seventh and Eighth Avenues. The New Amsterdam,
361: 4870: 3540:"Early Fall Brings Many New Plays; By Sept. 1 Times Square Will Be Offering as Many as Six to a Block" 12452: 12242: 12227: 11801: 11581: 11380: 10922: 10644: 10536: 10511: 10486: 10444: 1773: 1518: 1063: 591: 365: 303: 145: 10054:
Broadway Plays and Musicals: Descriptions and Essential Facts of More Than 14,000 Shows Through 2007
1238:
wavered in his support of the plan, referring to it as a "Disneyland on 42nd Street". Subsequently,
558:, Eltinge (now Empire), and Lew Fields theaters occupied the south side of the street. The original 12028: 11926: 11791: 11786: 11766: 11761: 11576: 11375: 11365: 11279: 10683: 10566: 10521: 10467: 4096:"New Film Is Shown At Eltinge Theatre: "Birth" Shows Every Phase of the Life of American Infants". 1686: 1546: 1504: 1490: 1004: 881: 864: 393: 8176: 7979:"42nd Street Theaters, Osborne Interior, More Round Out First Manhattan Landmarks Backlog Hearing" 6931:"Moss Denies Licenses to 2 'Follies' Houses; Says Republic and Eltinge Had Been Warned Repeatedly" 6107:"News of the Theater: Richman May Be in 'Follies' Shows Close Tonight; Gilbert Miller Returning". 4322: 4002: 3811: 3702: 1420:
executive as saying that the Empire 25 was "one of the best art houses in the country". A digital
12462: 12457: 12252: 11983: 11656: 11586: 11154: 11043: 10962: 10745: 10615: 10506: 7356: 7146: 5942: 5345: 4664: 1588: 1329: 958: 788: 590:. In the late 1990s, the former auditorium was converted into a lobby and lounge for a 25-screen 357: 10159: 5000: 3867: 12539: 12406: 12152: 12097: 11647: 11626: 11350: 11330: 11214: 10803: 10739: 10057: 7032: 3591: 2692:"Streetscapes: The Eltinge/Empire Theater; A Film Restores a Bit of 42d Street – in Faux Decay" 1700: 1672: 1412: 1315: 1306: 1037: 995: 10272: 9898: 9544: 3059: 892:, which opened in December 1915 and transferred to the Harris Theatre after seven months. The 12601: 12549: 12411: 12401: 12157: 12112: 12059: 12049: 11988: 11601: 11551: 11360: 11304: 11209: 11133: 10917: 10725: 10639: 10634: 10585: 10556: 10310: 10258: 10106: 10087: 9676: 9641: 9610: 9587: 9518: 9364: 8898: 8785: 8703: 8633: 8328: 8227: 7496: 7465: 7395: 7361: 7335: 7309: 7283: 7252: 7151: 7126: 7014: 6978: 6912: 6881: 6850: 6748: 6717: 6535: 6466: 6347: 6324: 6263: 6240: 6151: 6120: 5636: 5567: 5536: 5502: 5251: 5232: 5198: 5119: 5088: 5057: 4773: 4604: 4547: 4525: 4266: 4247: 4163: 4132: 4101: 3680: 3521: 3457: 3390: 3311:"New Times Square Theatre; Old Church in Forty-second Street to be Supplanted by a Playhouse" 3292: 3006: 2983: 2917: 2758: 2613: 2419: 2393: 2317: 2171: 1658: 1630: 1476: 1230: 1118: 858: 826: 551: 416: 327: 11399: 10216: 5998: 5752: 5451: 4475:"Bedroom Farce to Limit; Old Situations but New and Real Laughs in "Girl in the Limousine."" 2555: 12534: 12467: 12341: 12257: 11832: 11706: 11701: 11696: 11496: 11345: 11269: 11078: 11073: 11068: 10833: 10719: 5655:""Blackbirds" Run to End.; Negro Revue to Quit Saturday After Engagement of More Than Year" 2388:
Kramer, Louise (April 10, 2000). "Multiplexes storm city, and you ain't seen nothing yet".
1602: 1271: 1209: 1179: 784: 682: 464: 436: 10004: 9951: 6837:
Gross, Alexander S. Jr. (August 21, 1938). "Burlesque Sheds Its Name but Not Its Habits".
2312:
Sawyer, Tom (March 9, 1998). "Landmarked Empire Theater on a Slow Roll in New York City".
400:
covers 54,060 square feet (5,022 m) and extends 200 feet (61 m) between its two
8: 12054: 11842: 11686: 11676: 11566: 11546: 11531: 11486: 11355: 11249: 11123: 11093: 10993: 10988: 10983: 10978: 10937: 10877: 10813: 10807: 10768: 10693: 10664: 10600: 10526: 6973:"Laff, Crowd, Laff, Slogan of NY's Newest Film Spot: Eltinge Reopened, House of Comedy". 3363: 1644: 1386: 1382: 1319: 1187: 1171: 1133: 1122: 1021: 977:
closed, most of the Eltinge's productions ran for fewer than 200 performances, including
834: 632: 607: 531: 460: 444: 432: 424: 336: 12524: 12008: 11716: 11711: 11631: 11621: 11606: 11596: 11340: 10957: 10605: 10580: 10496: 10343: 10217: 9513: 5398: 4378:""Up in Mabel's Room."; John Cumberland and Walter Jones Shine In Fairly Amusing Farce" 1819: 1349: 1295: 1025: 707: 641: 547: 385: 345: 5153:"To Sell Cardigan Chaucer; Stolen Rare MS. Recovered Here Will Be Auctioned in London" 3242:"Theatre for A.H. Woods; New House in West 42d Street to be Called the Julian Eltinge" 3206:
Vaudeville old & new: an encyclopedia of variety performances in America, Volume 1
11957: 11811: 11756: 11430: 11259: 11234: 10659: 10625: 10546: 10360: 10350: 10327: 10289: 10279: 10224: 10061: 9841: 9742: 9703: 9633: 9552: 9472: 9430: 9391: 9356: 9321: 9280: 9242: 9200: 9161: 9123: 9039: 9000: 8961: 8890: 8855: 8812: 8777: 8742: 8695: 8660: 8625: 8587: 8533: 8494: 8455: 8416: 8358: 8293: 8254: 8219: 8184: 8145: 8047: 7916: 7877: 7873: 7834: 7783: 7732: 7690: 7637: 7599: 7561: 7523: 7488: 7457: 7422: 7387: 7275: 7217: 7178: 7118: 7083: 7040: 7006: 6938: 6904: 6873: 6842: 6812: 6774: 6740: 6709: 6662: 6624: 6586: 6527: 6492: 6458: 6423: 6373: 6289: 6232: 6197: 6143: 6112: 6077: 6039: 6006: 5852: 5760: 5662: 5628: 5593: 5559: 5528: 5494: 5459: 5311: 5224: 5190: 5160: 5111: 5080: 4966: 4933: 4836: 4724: 4630: 4517: 4482: 4385: 4239: 4155: 4124: 3968: 3930: 3777: 3547: 3486: 3449: 3419: 3382: 3318: 3284: 3249: 3209: 3170: 2840: 2833:"A Theater's Muses, Rescued; Mural Figures Recall Celebrity of a (Well-Painted) Face" 2699: 2657: 2563: 2446: 2355: 2256: 2215: 2163: 2066: 1916: 1437: 1043: 969:, which transferred from the Times Square Theatre to finish its 268-performance run. 677: 377: 279: 10345:
New York 2000: Architecture and Urbanism Between the Bicentennial and the Millennium
8772:
Cohn, Lawrence (September 24, 1990). "Legit: Gotham 'takes back' West 42nd Street".
4623:"Two Theatres Sold; The Liberty and Eltinge Pass From Goodridge Estate to Operators" 1117:
Eltinge was the second theater on 42nd Street to feature stock burlesque, following
53:
The theater is still used as the lobby of the AMC Empire 25 multiplex movie theater.
12477: 12117: 11911: 11901: 11726: 11721: 11506: 11501: 11108: 10595: 10575: 10531: 10516: 10435: 7483:
Morehouse, Ward III (November 9, 1977). "A 'Little White Way' for tawdry 42nd St".
6070:"Burlesque for Eltinge; A. H. Woods Subleases Theatre to Max Rudnick for Two Years" 2949: 1818:
South side of 42nd Street between Seventh Avenue and Broadway: now 7 Times Square (
1324: 1073: 1016: 1012: 986: 765: 543: 271: 152: 10238: 8620:
DuVal, Herb (August 14, 1987). "W. 42nd Street Projects Beginning To Take Shape".
6416:"McKee Closes Two Burlesques in 42d St.; Not a "Reformer" But Demands Clean Stage" 876:, which opened in January 1914 and ran for 183 performances. Later the same year, 12127: 12013: 11741: 11691: 11289: 11008: 10932: 10837: 10817: 10798: 10590: 10481: 10368: 10262: 10091: 8902: 8789: 8332: 8231: 7469: 7365: 7339: 7313: 7287: 7256: 7155: 7018: 6982: 6916: 6885: 6854: 6752: 6721: 6539: 6470: 6328: 6267: 6244: 6124: 5640: 5571: 5540: 5506: 5236: 5202: 5123: 5061: 4529: 4251: 4167: 4136: 3461: 3394: 3296: 3010: 2617: 2175: 2132: 2023: 1756: 1616: 1532: 1363: 1254:(LPC) to survey fifty of Midtown Manhattan's extant theaters in the early 1980s. 1247: 1163: 1096: 1020:
house's bookings. By then, Woods was busy with other projects, having leased the
965: 929: 888: 822: 761: 555: 389: 230: 48: 10314: 9680: 9645: 9614: 9591: 9522: 9368: 8707: 8637: 7500: 7399: 7130: 6351: 5092: 4608: 4105: 3684: 3525: 2987: 2921: 2762: 2423: 2397: 2321: 1867: 12482: 11591: 11481: 11476: 11199: 11013: 10912: 10778: 10749: 10649: 6155: 4959:"Emperor Jones" in Paris; Eugene O'Neill's Play Receives a Warm Welcome Abroad" 2133:
New York City, Proposed Times Square Hotel UDAG: Environmental Impact Statement
1813: 1807: 1801: 1714: 1424:
screen, the first in New York City, opened at the Empire 25 in September 2008.
1417: 1311: 1287: 1243: 921: 917: 877: 873: 853: 796: 733: 695: 628: 615: 583: 448: 420: 319: 315: 295: 287: 218: 8805:"City Buying Out 42nd St.: $ 2M would buy theater leases in crime-ridden area" 813: 12580: 12472: 12142: 12023: 12018: 12003: 11993: 11816: 11671: 11666: 11661: 11491: 11447: 11434: 10715: 10491: 10293: 9845: 9746: 9707: 9637: 9556: 9476: 9434: 9395: 9360: 9325: 9284: 9246: 9204: 9165: 9127: 9043: 9004: 8965: 8894: 8859: 8816: 8781: 8746: 8699: 8664: 8629: 8591: 8537: 8498: 8459: 8420: 8362: 8297: 8258: 8223: 8188: 8149: 8051: 7920: 7881: 7838: 7787: 7736: 7694: 7641: 7603: 7565: 7527: 7492: 7461: 7426: 7391: 7279: 7221: 7182: 7122: 7087: 7044: 7010: 6942: 6908: 6877: 6846: 6816: 6778: 6744: 6713: 6666: 6628: 6590: 6531: 6496: 6462: 6427: 6377: 6293: 6236: 6201: 6147: 6116: 6081: 6043: 6010: 5856: 5764: 5666: 5632: 5597: 5563: 5532: 5498: 5463: 5315: 5228: 5194: 5164: 5115: 5084: 4970: 4937: 4840: 4728: 4634: 4521: 4486: 4389: 4243: 4159: 4128: 3972: 3934: 3781: 3551: 3490: 3453: 3444:"The Vaudeville and Park News of the Week in New York City: Broadway Notes". 3423: 3386: 3322: 3288: 3253: 3174: 2844: 2703: 2661: 2567: 2450: 2359: 2260: 2219: 2167: 2070: 1291: 1085: 1051: 939: 869: 846: 757: 721: 381: 340: 283: 100: 87: 11896: 10372: 10364: 9804:"New York cinemas reopen after a year on pause – but will film fans return?" 9078: 8916: 8851: 8097: 6227:
Reilly, James F. (January 3, 1951). "Legitimate: the Disappearing Theatre".
1062:, which transferred from the Liberty and ran until June 1929. Following the 12442: 12437: 12432: 11611: 11103: 10792: 10782: 7865: 6805:"3 Theatres Get Licenses; Moss Acts on Permits for Former Burlesque Houses" 1906: 1354: 1340: 1205: 1159: 1142: 990: 780: 680:
covered the original facade with a stucco-and-plywood replica for the film
673: 661:, and the outer piers also contain cartouches at the third story. A carved 595: 369: 307: 135: 2945: 2027: 783:
became the epicenter for large-scale theater productions between 1900 and
12487: 12201: 12082: 11751: 10998: 9696:"A Multiplex Where 'Black Panther' Plays Next Door to Experimental Music" 8286:"The Region: Redevelopment; Times Square Plan Takes A Shaky Step Forward" 1162:. The Brandt family took over the Laff-Movie, along with the neighboring 1081: 1033: 924:, which ran from August 1917 to June 1918. This was followed by the play 669: 587: 291: 11536: 11526: 9671:
DiOrio, Carl (September 27, 2010). "At confab, glasses are half full".
8009:"7 Theaters on 42nd Street Fail to Make Cut for Landmark Consideration" 1239: 1155: 893: 886:
opened at the Eltinge, running for six months. The theater also hosted
717: 431:
entertainment complex is directly across 42nd Street to the north. The
408: 7948:"7 Theaters Among Midtown and Hell's Kitchen Sites Up for Landmarking" 5623:"Theater News: "The High Hatters" to Open Isquith's Series of Plays". 2059:"Commercial Real Estate; Cineplex Bringing Back The Movies to 42nd St" 11921: 11916: 11443: 10823: 10688: 2096: 1204:
42nd Street Company in 1972. At the time, the Empire was presenting "
1105: 726: 658: 539: 332: 68: 10404: 10395: 3116: 2208:"Critic's Notebook; Where Legends Were Born, Ghosts of Glory Linger" 11891: 9605:
Gurliacci, David (March 29, 2004). "Locating, locating, locating".
2158:"Legitimate: New York's Playhouse List Nearing Half Century Mark". 1195:
renamed the Empire in 1954; the name had previously been used by a
1066:, Woods produced several plays, which all had short runs. The play 769: 401: 397: 9735:"Without Crowds, Is Times Square Really Times Square? Take a Look" 8954:"Returning From Decline, 42d Street Is Now a Magnet for Merchants" 7001:"Pictures: Even 42d St., With Its Unique Films, Faces Shortages". 5075:"The Bronx Market. Investor Buys New Apartment on the Concourse". 904:
The Eltinge screened films in early 1917, such as the documentary
546:. In the first two decades of the 20th century, eleven venues for 12122: 10237: 3200:
Frank Cullen, Frank; Hackman, Florence; McNeilly, Donald (2007).
3100: 3088: 1235: 662: 9582:
Melnick, Ross (September 20, 2004). "Bringing Down the Houses".
7592:"Changing cityscape: $ 170M smile planned for face of W. 42d St" 1915:(5th ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. p. 296. 7274:. Vol. 205, no. 9. January 30, 1957. pp. 3, 20. 5554:"Legitimate: Barbour Receiver of Own Firm's "Excess Baggage"". 1011:, which was so negatively received that its leading performer, 9996: 7308:. Vol. 101, no. 22. September 11, 1972. p. E1. 3350:. Vol. 88, no. 2274. October 14, 1911. p. 558. 3348:
The Real Estate Record: Real estate record and builders' guide
3005:. Vol. 103, no. 8. August 1, 2000. pp. 26, 56. 676:. By 1993, the original facade had become so dilapidated that 11429: 9032:"Tussaud's and Movie Chain Join Disney in 42d Street Project" 8993:"Tussaud's and a Movie Chain Are Negotiating on 42d St. Site" 7005:. Vol. 165, no. 12. February 26, 1947. p. 27. 5936: 5934: 5880: 5878: 5719:"Murder on the Second Floor (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1929)" 5690: 5688: 5339: 5337: 9079:"42nd Street Project Advances with Move of Historic Theater" 5189:. Vol. 37, no. 38. September 19, 1925. p. 7. 4994: 4992: 4864: 4862: 4767: 4765: 4658: 4656: 4541: 4539: 4442:"The Girl in the Limousine (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1919)" 4413: 4411: 4316: 4314: 4238:. Vol. 30, no. 36. September 7, 1918. p. 14. 3861: 3859: 3805: 3803: 3696: 3694: 3026:"The City Performs: An Architectural History of NYC Theater" 817:
The facade as seen in 1912, shortly after the theater opened
10341:
Stern, Robert A. M.; Fishman, David; Tilove, Jacob (2006).
7334:. Vol. 70, no. 7. September 4, 1972. p. 21. 6342:
Grace, Deborah (February 27, 1993). "Reversal of fortune".
4205:"Business Before Pleasure (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1917)" 3996: 3994: 3585: 3583: 3418:. Vol. 28, no. 11. August 15, 1912. p. 11 . 3199: 1421: 10151: 10098: 9943: 9890: 7251:. Vol. 125, no. 42. August 24, 1953. p. 5. 5931: 5875: 5685: 5334: 5110:. Vol. 35, no. 49. December 8, 1923. p. 7. 4516:. Vol. 57, no. 5. December 26, 1919. p. 7. 3448:. Vol. 24, no. 33. August 17, 1912. p. 15. 2255:. Vol. XXVI, no. 10. May 11, 1912. p. 11c. 2162:. Vol. 48, no. 7. October 12, 1917. p. 14. 1076:, opened in late 1929. This was followed the next year by 999:, which opened in November 1923 and ran for seven months. 672:
and his brother Martin Woods. The theater was topped by a
10772: 10253:
Fuchs, Andreas (March 1, 2000). "Rebuilding the Empire".
9765: 8327:. Vol. 142, no. 24. August 4, 1981. p. 2. 5909:"A Month in the Country (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1930)" 5814:"Love, Honor and Betray (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1930)" 5783: 5493:. Vol. 39, no. 11. March 12, 1927. p. 11. 5390: 5243: 5223:. Vol. 38, no. 6. February 6, 1926. p. 6. 4989: 4859: 4762: 4653: 4536: 4408: 4311: 3856: 3800: 3691: 3381:. Vol. 25, no. 8. January 27, 1912. p. 3. 3283:. Vol. 23, no. 34. August 26, 1911. p. 8. 2137:
United States Department of Housing and Urban Development
1137:
However, after a series of sex crimes in early 1937, the
1015:, seldom appeared on Broadway again. That September, the 8624:. Vol. 28, no. 33. pp. 1A, 4A, 10A, 16A. 4893:"The Woman on the Jury (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1923)" 4687:"The Demi-Virgin (Broadway, Times Square Theatre, 1921)" 4258: 4174: 3991: 3580: 2439:"At Many a Multiplex, Lots Of Screens but Little Choice" 1812:
Southwest corner of 42nd Street and Seventh Avenue: now
1800:
Northwest corner of 42nd Street and Seventh Avenue: now
9116:"New 42d St., Old Theater: You'll Find It Up the Block" 8526:"Agreement Reached by Cuomo and Koch on Times Sq. Mart" 8390: 8388: 8386: 8384: 8138:"Long Delay Likely in Rebuilding Plan for Times Square" 8079: 8077: 8075: 8073: 7665: 7663: 7415:"A Critical Time For the Old Theaters Along 42d Street" 6739:. Vol. 49, no. 30. July 24, 1937. p. 5. 5697:"Murder on the Second Floor – Broadway Play – Original" 4154:. Vol. 29, no. 26. June 30, 1917. p. 4. 4123:. Vol. 46, no. 11. May 11, 1917. p. 29. 2608:"The High Cost of Moving "Plain Jane" to the Eltinge". 852:
The Eltinge Theatre opened on September 11, 1912, with
787:. Manhattan's theater district had begun to shift from 9384:"How a 7,000-Ton Broadway Theater Was Hoisted 30 Feet" 6977:. Vol. 68, no. 50. July 8, 1942. p. 9. 5558:. Vol. 91, no. 8. June 6, 1928. p. 51. 5185:"Shuberts Acquire Interest In Eltinge Theater Lease". 4420:"The Girl in the Limousine – Broadway Play – Original" 3336: 2189: 2187: 2185: 10257:. Vol. 103, no. 3. pp. 216, 218, 220. 9652: 9088:. Vol. 186, no. 4. April 1998. p. 38. 8842:
Fisher, Patricia; Marinaccio, Paul (April 14, 1989).
8351:"City Names Main Builders in Times Sq. Redevelopment" 8040:"City Names Main Builders in Times Sq. Redevelopment" 4345:"Up in Mabel's Room (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1919)" 4183:"Business Before Pleasure – Broadway Play – Original" 3117:"Empire Theatre-IBDB: The Internet Broadway Database" 1984: 1982: 1980: 1978: 1976: 8889:. Vol. 31, no. 17. pp. 1A, 33A, 37A. 8803:
Marinaccio, Paul; Berkowitz, Harry (March 6, 1989).
8714: 8381: 8070: 7806: 7755: 7660: 4119:"Moving Pictures: "Trip Through China" at Eltinge". 4025:"Cheating Cheaters (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1916)" 3834:"The Song of Songs (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1914)" 3725:"The Yellow Ticket (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1914)" 2757:. Vol. 39, no. 3. March 1998. p. 14. 2414:
Amelar, Sarah (April 1998). "Times Square tidings".
1934: 1932: 1905: 12612:
Relocated buildings and structures in New York City
10157: 10104: 10002: 9949: 9896: 8802: 8448:"Mart Developers in Times Sq. Plan Dropped by City" 5940: 5887:"A Month in the Country – Broadway Play – Original" 5884: 5792:"Love, Honor and Betray – Broadway Play – Original" 5789: 5694: 5396: 5343: 5249: 4998: 4868: 4771: 4662: 4545: 4417: 4320: 4264: 4180: 4000: 3865: 3809: 3700: 3589: 2939: 2937: 2935: 2933: 2931: 2883: 2881: 2801: 2799: 2731: 2729: 2727: 2725: 2182: 10342: 10340: 10271: 9458: 9456: 9228: 9226: 8735:"State Acquires Most of Times Square Project Site" 8720: 8573: 8571: 8394: 8083: 7909:"The Region; The City Casts Its Theaters In Stone" 7812: 7761: 7718: 7716: 7669: 7070: 7068: 7066: 6735:"General News: Gaiety, New York, Calls It Quits". 6704:"Burlesque Theaters Strip Word From Lobby Signs". 6184: 6182: 5992: 5990: 5965:"The Ninth Guest (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1930)" 5746: 5744: 5368:"The Ghost Train (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1926)" 5135: 5133: 5023:"Spring Cleaning (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1923)" 4871:"The Woman on the Jury – Broadway Play – Original" 3890:"Fair and Warmer (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1915)" 2193: 1988: 1973: 1806:Northeast corner of 42nd Street and Broadway: now 760:spanning the width of the room. The rooms contain 294:. It was originally named for female impersonator 208:1942 â€“ c. 1980s (single-screen movie theater) 10182:"The Love Thief (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1927)" 10023:"Blood and Sand (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1921)" 9872:"Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre (1912) New York, NY" 9864: 7970: 7304:"Levine, Brandt Partners In the 42nd Street Co". 7144:"State Liquor Authority Rents Broadway Offices". 4920: 4918: 4823: 4821: 4469: 4467: 4372: 4370: 4052: 4050: 3917: 3915: 3614:"Within the Law (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1912)" 3570: 3568: 3473: 3471: 3156: 3154: 3152: 3150: 3148: 3146: 3144: 3142: 2826: 2824: 2822: 2820: 2818: 2816: 2814: 2685: 2683: 2643: 2641: 2639: 2637: 2635: 2633: 2631: 2629: 2627: 2549: 2547: 2534: 2532: 2530: 2528: 2515: 2513: 2511: 2509: 2507: 2505: 2503: 1929: 938:, which opened in January 1919, and Collison and 12578: 9921:"See My Lawyer (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1915)" 9627: 8841: 6231:. Vol. 181, no. 4. pp. 266, 268. 4570:"Ladies' Night (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1920)" 2928: 2912:Hart, Sara (June 1999). "Nowhere to go but up". 2893: 2878: 2796: 2722: 2052: 2050: 2048: 1318:judge ruled that the sites could be acquired by 10269: 10246:New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission 10129:"The Fall Guy (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1925)" 9726: 9687: 9536: 9465:"Movie Theaters Build Themselves Into a Corner" 9453: 9414: 9375: 9265: 9223: 9184: 9023: 8984: 8945: 8580:"Nonprofit Status Urged For Times Sq. Theaters" 8568: 8562: 8400: 8344: 8342: 8238: 8218:. Vol. 306, no. 10. pp. 85, 90. 8131: 8129: 8089: 7713: 7675: 7456:. Vol. 321, no. 7. pp. 94, 116. 7406: 7386:. Vol. 271, no. 10. pp. 1, 111. 7325: 7323: 7299: 7297: 7201: 7162: 7063: 6996: 6994: 6992: 6968: 6966: 6964: 6759: 6691: 6561: 6402: 6274: 6179: 6173: 6062: 5987: 5741: 5647: 5578: 5518: 5516: 5489:"Lester Bryant Leases Eltinge Theater, N. Y.". 5274:"Stolen Fruit (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1925)" 5214: 5212: 5145: 5139: 5130: 4926:"Burns and Lawrence, a Tale of Two Playwrights" 4796:"East of Suez (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1922)" 4756: 4323:"Up in Mabel's Room – Broadway Play – Original" 4289:"Under Orders (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1918)" 4234:"The Dramatic Stage: New Plays: Under Orders". 4083: 4056: 3756: 3662: 3574: 2868: 2866: 2790: 2595: 2494: 2488: 2478: 2476: 2474: 2472: 2276: 2003: 1252:New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission 9502: 9500: 9498: 9346: 9344: 9342: 9308: 9306: 9073: 9071: 9069: 9067: 9065: 8615: 8613: 8487:"Koch Abolishes Times Sq. Pact With the State" 8409:"Redevelopment in Times Sq. Unlikely Till '84" 7939: 7377: 7375: 6572: 6570: 4951: 4915: 4818: 4709: 4615: 4464: 4367: 4047: 4003:"Cheating Cheaters – Broadway Play – Original" 3953: 3912: 3812:"The Song of Songs – Broadway Play – Original" 3762: 3703:"The Yellow Ticket – Broadway Play – Original" 3643: 3641: 3639: 3565: 3468: 3303: 3234: 3139: 2916:. Vol. 88, no. 6. pp. 124–127. 2811: 2680: 2624: 2544: 2525: 2500: 2430: 2307: 2305: 2199: 1963: 1961: 1959: 1957: 1955: 1953: 1951: 1949: 1947: 1100:. The theater's last-ever legitimate show was 286:. Opened in 1912, the theater was designed by 11415: 10860: 10420: 8765: 8694:. Vol. 31, no. 6. pp. 1A, 6A. 8247:"Five Theaters Added to 42d St. Revival Plan" 7725:"Can 42nd Street Regain Its Showbiz Glamour?" 6557: 6555: 6553: 6551: 6549: 2977: 2973: 2971: 2748: 2746: 2744: 2409: 2407: 2383: 2381: 2341: 2339: 2337: 2335: 2333: 2331: 2303: 2301: 2299: 2297: 2295: 2293: 2291: 2289: 2287: 2285: 2045: 1335: 716:Egyptian and Greek details. These included a 12184: 11109:Lewisohn Stadium of City College of New York 10074: 9382:Hughes, C. J.; Moon, Jeenah (May 28, 2022). 9273:"In the Works; A Dramatic Change of Address" 8878: 8339: 8207: 8126: 7445: 7346: 7320: 7294: 7263: 7240: 7137: 6989: 6961: 6892: 6861: 6830: 6728: 6697: 6515: 6446: 6335: 6251: 6220: 6169: 6167: 6165: 6100: 5943:"The Ninth Guest – Broadway Play – Original" 5616: 5547: 5513: 5482: 5346:"The Ghost Train – Broadway Play – Original" 5209: 5178: 5001:"Spring Cleaning – Broadway Play – Original" 4752: 4750: 4665:"The Demi-Virgin – Broadway Play – Original" 4079: 4077: 4075: 4073: 4071: 4069: 4067: 4065: 3868:"Fair and Warmer – Broadway Play – Original" 3752: 3750: 3658: 3656: 2982:. Vol. 34, no. 7. pp. 32–33. 2863: 2786: 2784: 2782: 2780: 2778: 2776: 2774: 2772: 2591: 2589: 2469: 2272: 2270: 1148: 10324:Broadway Theatres: History and Architecture 10270:Henderson, Mary C.; Greene, Alexis (2008). 10160:"The Love Thief – Broadway Play – Original" 9974:"Back Pay (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1921)" 9664: 9621: 9598: 9575: 9495: 9339: 9303: 9146: 9062: 8917:"42nd Street: No beat of dancing feet- yet" 8909: 8683: 8650: 8610: 7976: 7630:"City Considers Park Plan For Times Square" 7476: 7372: 7106: 7025: 6567: 5106:"Three New York City Houses Change Hands". 5099: 5045: 4505: 4227: 4143: 4112: 3636: 3592:"Within the Law – Broadway Play – Original" 3437: 3370: 3272: 2994: 2601: 2151: 2097:"MTA Neighborhood Maps: Times Sq-42 St (S)" 1999: 1997: 1944: 356:The Empire Theatre is on the south side of 41:Eltinge Theatre, Laff-Movie, Empire Theatre 11422: 11408: 10427: 10413: 10300: 10086:. Vol. 27, no. 111. p. 31. 10003:The Broadway League (September 20, 1921). 9899:"See My Lawyer – Broadway Play – Original" 9658: 9423:"A First Floor, 200 Feet Above the Ground" 9381: 8776:. Vol. 340, no. 11. p. 92. 8556: 7683:"Architecture View; Redeveloping New York" 7516:"Can Photos Return Gloss to Times Square?" 7247:"N.Y. 43rd St. House Reverts to Brandts". 6546: 6131: 5751:Atkinson, J. Brooks (September 12, 1929). 5695:The Broadway League (September 11, 1929). 5219:"Shuberts Withdraw From Eltinge Theater". 5068: 4772:The Broadway League (September 21, 1922). 4592: 4548:"Ladies' Night – Broadway Play – Original" 4089: 3668: 3590:The Broadway League (September 11, 1912). 3509: 2968: 2905: 2899: 2887: 2805: 2741: 2735: 2404: 2378: 2328: 2316:. Vol. 240, no. 10. p. 17. 2282: 1909:; Willensky, Elliot; Leadon, Fran (2010). 849:to the entire upper floor in August 1912. 535: trains, is just west of the theater. 47: 10107:"The Fall Guy – Broadway Play – Original" 9897:The Broadway League (September 2, 1915). 9771: 9732: 9604: 9543:Fabricant, Florence (December 19, 2001). 9542: 7482: 7451: 6685: 6396: 6346:. Vol. 57, no. 12. p. 42. 6162: 5450:Atkinson, J. Brooks (February 23, 1927). 5397:The Broadway League (February 22, 1927). 5252:"Stolen Fruit – Broadway Play – Original" 4774:"East of Suez – Broadway Play – Original" 4747: 4267:"Under Orders – Broadway Play – Original" 4062: 3810:The Broadway League (December 22, 1914). 3747: 3653: 2769: 2586: 2267: 1872:New York City Department of City Planning 653:, above which were doorways set within a 463:is to the southeast. An entrance to the 10321: 10158:The Broadway League (January 24, 1927). 9609:. Vol. 43, no. 13. p. 1. 9517:. Vol. 384, no. 1. p. 6. 8926:. Vol. 177. June 1989. p. 85. 8844:"City Gives Up on Buying Theater Leases" 8523: 8484: 8323:"Deadline Extended On N.Y. Mart Plans". 8175:Wellisz, Christopher (August 30, 1981). 8095: 7945: 7513: 7381: 5996: 5842: 5750: 5449: 5421:"Crime (Broadway, Empire Theatre, 1927)" 4999:The Broadway League (November 9, 1923). 4663:The Broadway League (October 18, 1921). 4321:The Broadway League (January 15, 1919). 3866:The Broadway League (November 6, 1915). 3701:The Broadway League (January 20, 1914). 2538: 2519: 2436: 2418:. Vol. 87, no. 4. p. 27. 2392:. Vol. 16, no. 15. p. 4. 1994: 1938: 1405:Seen with scaffolding around the marquee 1400: 1339: 1220: 812: 706: 12376:42nd Street–Port Authority Bus Terminal 12279:Armenian Evangelical Church of New York 10192:from the original on September 28, 2022 10047: 10005:"Blood and Sand – Broadway Show – Play" 9984:from the original on September 25, 2022 9962:from the original on September 25, 2022 9950:The Broadway League (August 30, 1921). 9931:from the original on September 28, 2022 9909:from the original on September 28, 2022 9784:from the original on September 28, 2022 9581: 9462: 9441:from the original on September 12, 2017 9420: 9402:from the original on September 23, 2022 9253:from the original on September 18, 2021 9232: 9211:from the original on September 23, 2022 9172:from the original on September 24, 2022 9134:from the original on September 27, 2022 9095:from the original on September 23, 2022 8578:Lueck, Thomas J. (September 17, 1987). 8446:Goodman, George W. (November 4, 1982). 8445: 8304:from the original on September 17, 2021 8213: 8174: 8156:from the original on September 17, 2021 8114:from the original on September 29, 2021 7989:from the original on September 30, 2021 7888:from the original on September 21, 2021 7863: 7773: 7554:"42d St. Show on Theaters is a Tragedy" 7412: 7330:"Levine & Brandt Top 42nd St. Co". 7207: 7051:from the original on September 28, 2022 6949:from the original on September 24, 2022 6785:from the original on September 28, 2022 6673:from the original on September 26, 2022 6635:from the original on September 28, 2022 6597:from the original on September 24, 2022 6503:from the original on September 24, 2022 6384:from the original on September 24, 2022 6257: 6208:from the original on September 24, 2022 6088:from the original on September 28, 2022 6050:from the original on September 28, 2022 5997:Atkinson, J. Brooks (August 26, 1930). 5975:from the original on September 28, 2022 5953:from the original on September 28, 2022 5941:The Broadway League (August 25, 1930). 5863:from the original on September 28, 2022 5824:from the original on September 28, 2022 5802:from the original on September 26, 2022 5771:from the original on September 28, 2022 5673:from the original on September 28, 2022 5470:from the original on September 26, 2022 5431:from the original on September 28, 2022 5378:from the original on September 25, 2022 5356:from the original on September 25, 2022 5344:The Broadway League (August 25, 1926). 5322:from the original on September 28, 2022 5250:The Broadway League (October 7, 1925). 5011:from the original on September 25, 2022 4977:from the original on September 28, 2022 4903:from the original on September 28, 2022 4869:The Broadway League (August 15, 1923). 4847:from the original on September 26, 2022 4806:from the original on September 24, 2022 4735:from the original on September 26, 2022 4641:from the original on September 26, 2022 4580:from the original on September 25, 2022 4493:from the original on September 28, 2022 4452:from the original on September 28, 2022 4418:The Broadway League (October 6, 1919). 4396:from the original on September 28, 2022 4355:from the original on September 25, 2022 4333:from the original on September 26, 2021 4299:from the original on September 26, 2022 4265:The Broadway League (August 20, 1918). 4215:from the original on September 28, 2022 4181:The Broadway League (August 15, 1917). 4013:from the original on September 25, 2022 3979:from the original on September 25, 2022 3941:from the original on September 25, 2022 3900:from the original on September 28, 2022 3878:from the original on September 25, 2022 3844:from the original on September 28, 2022 3822:from the original on September 25, 2022 3788:from the original on September 28, 2022 3735:from the original on September 24, 2022 3713:from the original on September 25, 2022 3624:from the original on September 25, 2022 3354:from the original on September 28, 2022 3260:from the original on September 28, 2022 3222:from the original on September 28, 2022 3160: 3111: 3109: 2851:from the original on September 24, 2022 2830: 2710:from the original on September 25, 2022 2647: 2574:from the original on September 28, 2022 2457:from the original on September 27, 2022 2366:from the original on September 28, 2022 2077:from the original on September 24, 2022 2056: 2009: 1878:from the original on September 28, 2022 1280:Prudential Insurance Company of America 711:Interior of the Eltinge Theatre in 1912 473:42nd Street–Port Authority Bus Terminal 451:are to the northeast. In addition, the 274:theater at 234 West 42nd Street in the 14: 12579: 10303:"The Busiest Movie Theatre in America" 10117:from the original on December 15, 2021 10105:The Broadway League (March 10, 1925). 9852:from the original on September 9, 2022 9670: 9483:from the original on February 24, 2017 9314:"Historic Empire Theater is Relocated" 9029: 8990: 8952:Lueck, Thomas J. (November 15, 1995). 8933:from the original on September 3, 2021 8732: 8653:"The Great White Way Makes a Comeback" 8651:O'Haire, Patricia (February 2, 1990). 8284:Lueck, Thomas J. (February 14, 1988). 8135: 7977:Bindelglass, Evan (November 9, 2015). 7907:Dunlap, David W. (November 22, 1987). 7906: 7824: 7168: 6576: 6226: 5919:from the original on November 29, 2020 5897:from the original on December 28, 2021 5885:The Broadway League (March 17, 1930). 5843:Atkinson, J. Brooks (March 13, 1930). 5790:The Broadway League (March 12, 1930). 5729:from the original on February 16, 2020 4546:The Broadway League (August 9, 1920). 4193:from the original on September 3, 2022 4001:The Broadway League (August 9, 1916). 3602:from the original on February 21, 2020 3101:Landmarks Preservation Commission 1987 3089:Landmarks Preservation Commission 1987 2554:Gray, Christopher (October 10, 2008). 2413: 2387: 2311: 2205: 1901: 1899: 1897: 1895: 1893: 1862: 1860: 1858: 1856: 1854: 1443: 1348:By 1995, real-estate development firm 542:'s Theater District and contains many 12513: 12329: 12183: 11873: 11458: 11403: 10859: 10455: 10434: 10408: 10252: 10223:(1st ed.). New York: Routledge. 10214: 10170:from the original on October 29, 2021 10080: 9952:"Back Pay – Broadway Play – Original" 9733:Kilgannon, Corey (December 1, 2020). 9714:from the original on November 9, 2020 9694:Chow, Andrew R. (February 16, 2018). 9506: 9190: 9113: 8951: 8884: 8689: 8671:from the original on January 19, 2022 8619: 8598:from the original on November 1, 2017 8577: 8406: 8348: 8283: 8244: 8037: 7927:from the original on October 16, 2021 7845:from the original on October 29, 2021 7827:"Landmark Status Sought for Theaters" 7825:Dunlap, David W. (October 20, 1982). 7794:from the original on January 19, 2022 7722: 7701:from the original on January 17, 2022 7648:from the original on October 16, 2021 7610:from the original on October 16, 2021 7572:from the original on October 16, 2021 7534:from the original on October 16, 2021 6836: 6341: 5845:"The Play; Where She Buries Her Dead" 4881:from the original on October 27, 2021 4430:from the original on January 26, 2022 3647: 3070:from the original on October 19, 2021 3064:New York Preservation Archive Project 3023: 2872: 2668:from the original on December 7, 2019 2610:The New York Herald, New York Tribune 2482: 2348:"Entertaining plans for Times Square" 2345: 2226:from the original on October 16, 2021 2107:Metropolitan Transportation Authority 1967: 1464: 1461: 1458: 635:, which flank the arch. According to 335:by Max Rudnick from 1931 until 1942. 12592:2000 establishments in New York City 12587:1912 establishments in New York City 12371:42nd Street–Bryant Park/Fifth Avenue 12065:The Theater at Madison Square Garden 10456: 9753:from the original on August 19, 2022 9693: 9463:Pristin, Terry (September 4, 2000). 8771: 8544:from the original on October 1, 2021 8505:from the original on October 1, 2021 8485:Gottlieb, Martin (August 11, 1983). 8466:from the original on October 1, 2021 8369:from the original on October 1, 2021 8058:from the original on October 1, 2021 7946:Rajamani, Maya (February 23, 2016). 7413:Horsley, Carter B. (June 19, 1977). 7352: 4784:from the original on January 5, 2022 3208:. Psychology Press. pp. 353–4. 3181:from the original on August 12, 2016 3106: 2911: 2690:Gray, Christopher (March 28, 1993). 2689: 2553: 2113:from the original on August 29, 2021 1132:After he was elected mayor in 1934, 29:Movie theater in Manhattan, New York 12248:Stavros Niarchos Foundation Library 12238:New York Public Library Main Branch 12223:CUNY School of Professional Studies 10326:. Mineola, NY: Dover Publications. 9607:Westchester County Business Journal 8866:from the original on April 10, 2022 8823:from the original on April 10, 2022 8524:Barbanel, Josh (October 20, 1983). 8265:from the original on April 10, 2022 8195:from the original on April 10, 2022 8136:Dunlap, David W. (August 3, 1992). 8015:. February 23, 2016. Archived from 7514:Williams, Lena (November 7, 1977). 7228:from the original on April 10, 2022 6434:from the original on March 14, 2018 5707:from the original on March 10, 2022 5604:from the original on March 14, 2018 5409:from the original on April 16, 2022 4829:"The Masked Woman' for the Eltinge" 4697:from the original on April 12, 2022 4675:from the original on April 12, 2022 3279:"Julian Eltinge Theatre a Surety". 3161:Holusha, John (February 28, 1998). 3040:from the original on March 25, 2020 3030:New York City College of Technology 2943: 2648:Holusha, John (November 30, 1997). 2556:"An Architect for Stage and Screen" 2057:Holusha, John (November 10, 1999). 1890: 1851: 985:in 1923. One of the exceptions was 803: 578:The Empire Theatre, originally the 24: 12514: 12330: 12218:CUNY Graduate School of Journalism 10301:McClintock, Pamela (May 6, 2011). 10139:from the original on June 15, 2021 9586:. Vol. 385. p. S12-S13. 9351:"Theater Slides Into a New Home". 8733:Levine, Richard (April 19, 1990). 7723:Prial, Frank J. (April 18, 1982). 7598:. November 19, 1978. p. 423. 7433:from the original on April 8, 2022 7189:from the original on April 9, 2022 7094:from the original on April 9, 2022 6300:from the original on June 13, 2022 5399:"Crime – Broadway Play – Original" 5284:from the original on June 18, 2022 5262:from the original on June 17, 2022 5033:from the original on June 18, 2017 4558:from the original on April 8, 2022 4035:from the original on March 9, 2022 3127:from the original on June 23, 2013 2755:Building Design & Construction 1465: 1453:Notable productions at the theater 702: 586:for the Hungarian-born impresario 290:for the Hungarian-born impresario 25: 12648: 12299:Our Saviour Roman Catholic Church 11644: 10380: 10309:. Vol. 417. pp. 60–63. 9814:from the original on May 16, 2021 9772:Goldsmith, Jill (March 6, 2021). 9563:from the original on May 27, 2015 9291:from the original on May 26, 2015 9235:"The Delicate Task of Demolition" 9233:Holusha, John (August 17, 1997). 9114:Lueck, Thomas J. (June 5, 1996). 9050:from the original on May 26, 2015 9011:from the original on May 26, 2015 8972:from the original on May 26, 2015 8753:from the original on May 25, 2015 8427:from the original on May 24, 2015 8407:Prial, Frank J. (April 7, 1982). 8349:Prial, Frank J. (April 6, 1982). 8245:Prial, Frank J. (June 13, 1982). 8038:Prial, Frank J. (April 6, 1982). 7864:Shepard, Joan (August 28, 1985). 7774:Goodwin, Michael (June 8, 1980). 7743:from the original on May 24, 2015 7560:. October 19, 1977. p. 336. 7270:"42d St. Grinds' $ 5-mil Gross". 6457:. September 21, 1932. p. 2. 5079:. November 21, 1923. p. 33. 5056:. November 21, 1923. p. 20. 4277:from the original on May 11, 2022 3520:. September 12, 1912. p. 9. 3497:from the original on July 5, 2018 2956:from the original on July 5, 2013 1274:and Seventh Avenue, developed by 948:, which opened the same October. 747: 11351:Burton's Chambers Street Theatre 10041: 9826: 9796: 9421:Holusha, John (March 14, 1999). 9154:"25 screens for 5,000 film fans" 9107: 8835: 8796: 8726: 8721:Stern, Fishman & Tilove 2006 8644: 8517: 8478: 8439: 8395:Stern, Fishman & Tilove 2006 8316: 8277: 8168: 8096:Stephens, Suzanne (March 2000). 8084:Stern, Fishman & Tilove 2006 8031: 8001: 7900: 7857: 7818: 7813:Stern, Fishman & Tilove 2006 7767: 7762:Stern, Fishman & Tilove 2006 7670:Stern, Fishman & Tilove 2006 7622: 7584: 7546: 7507: 6923: 6903:. February 1, 1942. p. 30. 6797: 6647: 6609: 6477: 6408: 6358: 6312: 6024: 5836: 5443: 5296: 3377:"Eltinge Theatre Soon to Open". 2831:Holusha, John (March 24, 2000). 2612:. August 31, 1924. p. E10. 2437:Hornaday, Ann (August 4, 1996). 2194:Stern, Fishman & Tilove 2006 1989:Stern, Fishman & Tilove 2006 1827: 1791: 1261: 538:The surrounding area is part of 12545:Sniffen Court Historic District 11572:Greenwich Savings Bank Building 11557:Engineering Societies' Building 10219:The Routledge Guide to Broadway 9507:Hayes, Dade (August 20, 2001). 9030:Pulley, Brett (July 16, 1995). 8991:Pulley, Brett (July 13, 1995). 7776:"Roadblocks For a New Times Sq" 7636:. August 25, 1978. p. 14. 7169:Cooper, Lee E. (June 9, 1946). 7150:. March 20, 1944. p. 21A. 6526:. October 12, 1932. p. 3. 3679:. January 21, 1914. p. 7. 3532: 3401: 3193: 3094: 3082: 3052: 3017: 2238: 2125: 1024:and owning a half-stake in the 12284:First Zen Institute of America 11943:Girl Scout Museum and Archives 10278:. New York: Back Stage Books. 9355:. March 2, 1998. p. A08. 9191:Weber, Bruce (June 25, 1996). 9160:. June 13, 1996. p. 328. 7208:Zolotow, Sam (April 3, 1953). 7117:. April 9, 1944. p. RE1. 7039:. June 24, 1942. p. 234. 6323:. April 26, 1932. p. 12. 5627:. April 21, 1928. p. 10. 2089: 1215: 310:, which opened in April 2000. 13: 1: 12233:High School of Art and Design 11885:Shops, restaurants, nightlife 11772:Joseph Raphael De Lamar House 11459: 10828:Blue Note Entertainment Group 10349:. New York: Monacelli Press. 9320:. March 2, 1998. p. 30. 8107:. Vol. 188. p. 92. 7485:The Christian Science Monitor 6708:. June 24, 1937. p. 19. 6577:Bovsun, Mara (May 20, 1998). 6142:. March 6, 1931. p. 30. 6111:. March 7, 1931. p. 14. 5527:. March 5, 1927. p. 10. 4603:. July 23, 1921. p. 13. 4100:. April 9, 1917. p. 11. 1779: 1268:Urban Development Corporation 12309:St. Francis of Assisi Church 12304:Redeemer Presbyterian Church 11807:Tiffany and Company Building 11732:Adelaide L. T. Douglas House 11220:Koster and Bial's Music Hall 11170:Barnum's New American Museum 10710:Circle in the Square Theatre 9675:. Vol. 416. p. 7. 7866:"Is the final curtain near?" 7332:The Independent Film Journal 4512:"New York Under-theatred?". 2346:Lowry, Tom (July 21, 1995). 2206:Gussow, Mel (May 23, 1990). 1844: 1396: 1111: 665:runs above the third story. 204:1912–1931 (Broadway theater) 7: 12617:Theater District, Manhattan 12568:Manhattan Community Board 5 12417:Port Authority Bus Terminal 11953:Morgan Library & Museum 11907:J. Levine Books and Judaica 11874: 11747:Civic Club / Estonian House 11687:29 E 32nd St (Grolier Club) 10048:Hischak, Thomas S. (2009). 9335:– via newspapers.com. 9180:– via newspapers.com. 8874:– via newspapers.com. 8831:– via newspapers.com. 8679:– via newspapers.com. 8563:Henderson & Greene 2008 7896:– via newspapers.com. 7656:– via newspapers.com. 7618:– via newspapers.com. 7580:– via newspapers.com. 7059:– via newspapers.com. 6872:. July 4, 1937. p. 7. 6692:Henderson & Greene 2008 6605:– via newspapers.com. 6562:Henderson & Greene 2008 6403:Henderson & Greene 2008 6174:Henderson & Greene 2008 5140:Henderson & Greene 2008 4757:Henderson & Greene 2008 4084:Henderson & Greene 2008 4057:Henderson & Greene 2008 3757:Henderson & Greene 2008 3663:Henderson & Greene 2008 3575:Henderson & Greene 2008 3034:City University of New York 3024:Swift, Christopher (2018). 2791:Henderson & Greene 2008 2596:Henderson & Greene 2008 2495:Henderson & Greene 2008 2374:– via newspapers.com. 2277:Henderson & Greene 2008 2004:Henderson & Greene 2008 1868:"234 West 42 Street, 10036" 1767: 1227:City University of New York 689: 580:Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre 457:the New York Times Building 453:Port Authority Bus Terminal 337:Bud Abbott and Lou Costello 10: 12653: 12627:Theatres completed in 2000 12622:Theatres completed in 1912 12294:Millinery Center Synagogue 11948:Houdini Museum of New York 11838:Kaskel and Kaskel Building 11782:Lefcourt Colonial Building 11737:Allerton 39th Street House 11582:Lord & Taylor Building 11522:American Radiator Building 11230:Madison Square Roof Garden 11064:Daly's 63rd Street Theatre 10736:Samuel J. Friedman Theatre 10675:Roundabout Theatre Company 10400:Internet Broadway Database 10322:Morrison, William (1999). 10255:Film Journal International 10208: 4150:"Undergoing Alterations". 3003:Film Journal International 1912:AIA Guide to New York City 1729:Murder on the Second Floor 1336:Relocation and restoration 1121:Republic Theater (now the 1069:Murder on the Second Floor 908:and the educational movie 775: 12562: 12520: 12509: 12426:Streets and intersections 12425: 12394: 12381:Grand Central–42nd Street 12361:34th Street–Herald Square 12340: 12336: 12325: 12271: 12243:Norman Thomas High School 12228:Guttman Community College 12210: 12194: 12190: 12179: 12075: 12037: 11971: 11935: 11884: 11880: 11869: 11825: 11640: 11469: 11465: 11454: 11441: 11318: 11147: 11089:George M. Cohan's Theatre 10971: 10870: 10866: 10861:Defunct and/or demolished 10855: 10759: 10702: 10673: 10624: 10565: 10512:Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre 10487:Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre 10466: 10462: 10451: 10442: 9509:"Gotham plex riding high" 2390:Crain's New York Business 1774:List of Broadway theaters 1575:The Girl in the Limousine 1149:Movie theater and decline 1139:La Guardia administration 1064:Wall Street Crash of 1929 945:The Girl in the Limousine 621: 573: 459:is to the south, and the 368:near the southern end of 241: 236: 229: 224: 214: 200: 192: 184: 176: 168: 163: 151: 141: 131: 116: 77: 62: 58: 46: 39: 12632:Thomas W. Lamb buildings 12607:Former Broadway theatres 12386:Times Square–42nd Street 12366:34th Street–Penn Station 12356:34th Street–Penn Station 12185:Other points of interest 12138:Metropolitan Opera House 12133:Maxine Elliott's Theatre 12029:Wyndham New Yorker Hotel 11936:Museums/cultural centers 11792:Pershing Square Building 11787:Madison Belmont Building 11767:Jonathan W. Allen Stable 11762:George S. Bowdoin Stable 11577:James A. Farley Building 11562:Engineers' Club Building 11336:Barnum's American Museum 11119:Maxine Elliott's Theatre 10928:Metropolitan Opera House 10684:Stephen Sondheim Theatre 10567:Nederlander Organization 10522:James Earl Jones Theatre 10468:The Shubert Organization 1784: 1296:Equitable Life Assurance 1250:theaters, motivated the 951: 914:Business Before Pleasure 808: 768:, foreign-language, and 475:stations, served by the 469:Times Square–42nd Street 423:to the east, as well as 394:Madame Tussauds New York 210:2000–present (multiplex) 188:1998 (original interior) 12597:42nd Street (Manhattan) 12263:Wood Tobé–Coburn School 12253:Stern College for Women 11657:One Grand Central Place 11507:452 5th Av (HSBC Tower) 11431:Midtown (30th–42nd Sts) 11044:Civic Repertory Theatre 11039:Charles Hopkins Theatre 10746:Vivian Beaumont Theater 10616:Richard Rodgers Theatre 10507:Ethel Barrymore Theatre 10058:McFarland & Company 7357:New York Herald Tribune 7147:New York Herald Tribune 6901:New York Herald Tribune 6870:New York Herald Tribune 6839:New York Herald Tribune 6706:New York Herald Tribune 6524:New York Herald Tribune 6455:New York Herald Tribune 6321:New York Herald Tribune 6260:New York Herald Tribune 6109:New York Herald Tribune 5625:New York Herald Tribune 5525:New York Herald Tribune 3123:. The Broadway League. 2314:Engineering News-Record 2246:"That Eltinge Elevator" 351: 12637:Times Square buildings 12407:Grand Central Terminal 11627:Springs Mills Building 11331:Anthony Street Theatre 10804:Mark Hellinger Theatre 10645:Eugene O'Neill Theatre 10307:The Hollywood Reporter 9673:The Hollywood Reporter 9584:The Hollywood Reporter 7249:The Hollywood Reporter 6975:The Hollywood Reporter 6422:. September 20, 1932. 3485:. September 12, 1912. 1743:A Month in the Country 1430:The Hollywood Reporter 1413:The Hollywood Reporter 1406: 1345: 1316:New York Supreme Court 1307:The Durst Organization 1197:theater on 41st Street 1091:A Month in the Country 818: 712: 396:museum. The complex's 12412:New York Penn Station 12402:Grand Central Madison 12289:Holy Innocents Church 12158:Sam H. Harris Theatre 12113:Herald Square Theatre 12060:Madison Square Garden 12050:New Amsterdam Theatre 11927:Wolfgang's Steakhouse 11802:Socony–Mobil Building 11602:Million Dollar Corner 11552:Empire State Building 11381:Richmond Hill Theatre 11361:Nassau Street Theatre 11310:Winter Garden Theatre 11210:Herald Square Theatre 11134:Sam H. Harris Theatre 11099:Knickerbocker Theatre 10918:International Theatre 10726:New Amsterdam Theatre 10640:August Wilson Theatre 10635:Al Hirschfeld Theatre 10586:Lunt-Fontanne Theatre 10557:Winter Garden Theatre 10188:. December 14, 2015. 10135:. December 14, 2015. 9980:. December 14, 2015. 9927:. December 14, 2015. 7689:. December 23, 1979. 7082:. December 22, 1944. 6811:. December 11, 1937. 6661:. December 27, 1934. 6623:. November 17, 1934. 6076:. February 26, 1931. 5971:. December 14, 2015. 5915:. December 14, 2015. 5820:. December 14, 2015. 5725:. December 14, 2015. 5427:. December 14, 2015. 5374:. December 14, 2015. 5280:. December 14, 2015. 5159:. February 19, 1925. 5029:. December 14, 2015. 4899:. December 14, 2015. 4835:. December 13, 1922. 4802:. December 14, 2015. 4723:. February 21, 1922. 4576:. December 14, 2015. 4448:. December 14, 2015. 4351:. December 14, 2015. 4295:. December 14, 2015. 4211:. December 14, 2015. 4031:. December 14, 2015. 3896:. December 14, 2015. 3840:. December 14, 2015. 3776:. December 23, 1914. 3731:. December 14, 2015. 3620:. December 14, 2015. 1659:The Woman on the Jury 1404: 1343: 1221:Preservation attempts 1078:Love Honor and Betray 983:The Woman on the Jury 816: 710: 417:New Amsterdam Theatre 206:1931–1942 (burlesque) 101:40.75667°N 73.98917°W 12258:William Esper Studio 11848:Pennsylvania Station 11833:Bryant Hall Building 11707:152 East 38th Street 11702:146 East 38th Street 11641:5th Av â€“ 3rd Av 11587:Macy's Herald Square 11470:8th Av â€“ 5th Av 11270:Paradise Roof Garden 11155:Abbey's Park Theatre 11114:Lyric Theatre (1903) 11074:Fifth Avenue Theatre 11069:Earl Carroll Theatre 10834:Times Square Theater 10248:. November 17, 1987. 9086:Architectural Record 8924:Architectural Record 8105:Architectural Record 8019:on November 29, 2020 7958:on November 28, 2020 6937:. February 1, 1942. 6579:"Big town, big time" 6491:. October 13, 1932. 6138:"Theatrical Notes". 6038:. February 8, 1931. 4965:. November 1, 1923. 4384:. January 16, 1919. 3929:. November 8, 1915. 3409:"Woods New Quarters" 3317:. October 18, 1911. 3060:"Theater District –" 2980:Entertainment Design 2497:, pp. 143, 147. 2139:. 1981. p. 4.15 1416:, in 2005, quoted a 785:the Great Depression 683:The Last Action Hero 505:​​, 465:New York City Subway 437:Times Square Theater 66:234 West 42nd Street 12153:Reuben's Restaurant 12098:Browne's Chop House 12055:Nederlander Theatre 12038:Venues and theaters 11999:Martinique New York 11843:Latting Observatory 11617:New York Times Bldg 11547:The Continental NYC 11532:Bryant Park Studios 11356:John Street Theatre 11250:New Theatre Comique 11240:Murray Hill Theatre 10994:American Music Hall 10989:49th Street Theatre 10984:44th Street Theatre 10979:39th Street Theatre 10938:New Century Theatre 10878:48th Street Theatre 10814:New Victory Theater 10808:Times Square Church 10769:Ed Sullivan Theater 10694:Todd Haimes Theatre 10665:Walter Kerr Theatre 10601:Nederlander Theatre 10527:John Golden Theatre 10215:Bloom, Ken (2007). 10029:. December 14, 2015 9878:. December 12, 2019 9630:New York Daily News 9353:The Washington Post 9158:New York Daily News 8657:New York Daily News 8098:"Four Times Square" 7870:New York Daily News 7596:New York Daily News 7558:New York Daily News 7037:New York Daily News 7033:"Laffmovie to Open" 6583:New York Daily News 5310:. October 8, 1925. 5142:, pp. 152–153. 4932:. August 19, 1923. 4481:. October 7, 1919. 4059:, pp. 150–151. 3967:. August 10, 1916. 3577:, pp. 147–148. 3344:"Contracts Awarded" 3248:. August 15, 1911. 2352:New York Daily News 1455: 1444:Notable productions 1383:Abbott and Costello 1134:Fiorello La Guardia 1022:Martin Beck Theatre 612:Gould Evans Goodman 608:Beyer Blinder Belle 461:Nederlander Theatre 445:New Victory Theater 433:Todd Haimes Theatre 425:Eleven Times Square 106:40.75667; -73.98917 97: /  36: 12525:Caspar Samler farm 12493:Park Avenue Tunnel 12009:Hotel Pennsylvania 11632:Times Square Tower 11622:Pennsylvania Plaza 11597:Marbridge Building 11305:Weber's Music Hall 11245:New Bowery Theatre 11124:Nora Bayes Theatre 11094:Hippodrome Theatre 10958:Vanderbilt Theatre 10606:Neil Simon Theatre 10581:Lena Horne Theatre 10497:Broadhurst Theatre 10477:Ambassador Theatre 9739:The New York Times 9700:The New York Times 9549:The New York Times 9469:The New York Times 9427:The New York Times 9388:The New York Times 9277:The New York Times 9239:The New York Times 9197:The New York Times 9120:The New York Times 9036:The New York Times 8997:The New York Times 8958:The New York Times 8739:The New York Times 8584:The New York Times 8530:The New York Times 8491:The New York Times 8452:The New York Times 8413:The New York Times 8355:The New York Times 8325:Women's Wear Daily 8290:The New York Times 8251:The New York Times 8181:The New York Times 8142:The New York Times 8044:The New York Times 7913:The New York Times 7831:The New York Times 7780:The New York Times 7729:The New York Times 7687:The New York Times 7520:The New York Times 7419:The New York Times 7214:The New York Times 7175:The New York Times 7115:The New York Times 7080:The New York Times 6935:The New York Times 6809:The New York Times 6771:The New York Times 6659:The New York Times 6621:The New York Times 6489:The New York Times 6420:The New York Times 6370:The New York Times 6288:. April 26, 1932. 6286:The New York Times 6194:The New York Times 6140:The New York Times 6074:The New York Times 6036:The New York Times 6003:The New York Times 5849:The New York Times 5757:The New York Times 5659:The New York Times 5592:. March 12, 1928. 5590:The New York Times 5456:The New York Times 5308:The New York Times 5157:The New York Times 5077:The New York Times 4963:The New York Times 4930:The New York Times 4833:The New York Times 4721:The New York Times 4627:The New York Times 4479:The New York Times 4382:The New York Times 3965:The New York Times 3927:The New York Times 3774:The New York Times 3544:The New York Times 3483:The New York Times 3315:The New York Times 3246:The New York Times 3167:The New York Times 2837:The New York Times 2696:The New York Times 2654:The New York Times 2560:The New York Times 2443:The New York Times 2212:The New York Times 2063:The New York Times 1820:Times Square Tower 1561:Up in Mabel's Room 1451: 1407: 1367:then lifted about 1350:Forest City Ratner 1346: 1060:Blackbirds of 1928 1026:Broadhurst Theatre 935:Up in Mabel's Room 910:Trip Through China 819: 742:The New York Times 713: 642:The New York Times 582:, was designed by 548:legitimate theatre 386:Lew Fields Theatre 346:Forest City Ratner 172:September 11, 1912 34: 12574: 12573: 12558: 12557: 12505: 12504: 12501: 12500: 12321: 12320: 12317: 12316: 12175: 12174: 12171: 12170: 11984:The Knickerbocker 11963:Scandinavia House 11958:Museum of the Dog 11865: 11864: 11861: 11860: 11812:Union League Club 11757:Demarest Building 11397: 11396: 11393: 11392: 11389: 11388: 11300:Wallack's Theatre 11235:Manhattan Theatre 11205:Grand Opera House 11059:Criterion Theatre 10948:President Theatre 10943:Playhouse Theatre 10851: 10850: 10847: 10846: 10762:Broadway theatres 10660:St. James Theatre 10626:ATG Entertainment 10547:Music Box Theatre 10436:Broadway theatres 10356:978-1-58093-177-9 10285:978-0-8230-3072-9 10230:978-0-415-97380-9 9810:. March 6, 2021. 9661:, pp. 60–61. 6773:. July 13, 1937. 6372:. April 7, 1932. 5661:. June 10, 1929. 4629:. July 23, 1921. 3546:. June 17, 1912. 3215:978-0-415-93853-2 1941:, pp. 78–79. 1922:978-0-19538-386-7 1765: 1764: 1547:Cheating Cheaters 1505:The Song of Songs 1491:The Yellow Ticket 1438:COVID-19 pandemic 1276:Park Tower Realty 1088:'s production of 1044:Claudette Colbert 898:Cheating Cheaters 883:The Song of Songs 865:The Yellow Ticket 678:Columbia Pictures 604:Benjamin Thompson 544:Broadway theaters 427:to the west. The 378:Midtown Manhattan 280:Midtown Manhattan 260: 259: 157:4,764 (multiplex) 16:(Redirected from 12644: 12530:Garment District 12511: 12510: 12478:Lexington Avenue 12338: 12337: 12327: 12326: 12192: 12191: 12181: 12180: 12148:Princess Theatre 12118:Hotel Pierrepont 12093:Broadway Theatre 11912:Keens Steakhouse 11902:The Cutting Room 11882: 11881: 11871: 11870: 11776:Polish Consulate 11646: 11542:Candler Building 11467: 11466: 11456: 11455: 11424: 11417: 11410: 11401: 11400: 11366:National Theatre 11346:Broadway Theatre 11326:American Theatre 11295:Victoria Theatre 11275:Princess Theatre 11255:New York Theatre 11180:Broadway Theatre 11160:Academy of Music 11129:Princess Theatre 11019:Broadway Theatre 10963:Ziegfeld Theatre 10903:Colonial Theatre 10868: 10867: 10857: 10856: 10596:Minskoff Theatre 10576:Gershwin Theatre 10542:Majestic Theatre 10532:Longacre Theatre 10517:Imperial Theatre 10502:Broadway Theatre 10464: 10463: 10457:Active, by owner 10453: 10452: 10429: 10422: 10415: 10406: 10405: 10392: 10391: 10389:Official website 10376: 10348: 10337: 10318: 10297: 10277: 10266: 10249: 10243: 10234: 10222: 10202: 10201: 10199: 10197: 10178: 10177: 10175: 10155: 10149: 10148: 10146: 10144: 10125: 10124: 10122: 10102: 10096: 10095: 10078: 10072: 10071: 10050:"Blood and Sand" 10045: 10039: 10038: 10036: 10034: 10019: 10017: 10015: 10000: 9994: 9993: 9991: 9989: 9970: 9969: 9967: 9947: 9941: 9940: 9938: 9936: 9917: 9916: 9914: 9894: 9888: 9887: 9885: 9883: 9868: 9862: 9861: 9859: 9857: 9830: 9824: 9823: 9821: 9819: 9800: 9794: 9793: 9791: 9789: 9769: 9763: 9762: 9760: 9758: 9730: 9724: 9723: 9721: 9719: 9691: 9685: 9684: 9668: 9662: 9656: 9650: 9649: 9625: 9619: 9618: 9602: 9596: 9595: 9579: 9573: 9572: 9570: 9568: 9540: 9534: 9533: 9531: 9529: 9504: 9493: 9492: 9490: 9488: 9460: 9451: 9450: 9448: 9446: 9418: 9412: 9411: 9409: 9407: 9379: 9373: 9372: 9348: 9337: 9336: 9334: 9332: 9310: 9301: 9300: 9298: 9296: 9279:. June 9, 1996. 9269: 9263: 9262: 9260: 9258: 9230: 9221: 9220: 9218: 9216: 9188: 9182: 9181: 9179: 9177: 9150: 9144: 9143: 9141: 9139: 9111: 9105: 9104: 9102: 9100: 9094: 9083: 9075: 9060: 9059: 9057: 9055: 9027: 9021: 9020: 9018: 9016: 8988: 8982: 8981: 8979: 8977: 8949: 8943: 8942: 8940: 8938: 8932: 8921: 8913: 8907: 8906: 8882: 8876: 8875: 8873: 8871: 8839: 8833: 8832: 8830: 8828: 8800: 8794: 8793: 8769: 8763: 8762: 8760: 8758: 8730: 8724: 8718: 8712: 8711: 8687: 8681: 8680: 8678: 8676: 8648: 8642: 8641: 8617: 8608: 8607: 8605: 8603: 8575: 8566: 8560: 8554: 8553: 8551: 8549: 8521: 8515: 8514: 8512: 8510: 8482: 8476: 8475: 8473: 8471: 8443: 8437: 8436: 8434: 8432: 8404: 8398: 8392: 8379: 8378: 8376: 8374: 8346: 8337: 8336: 8320: 8314: 8313: 8311: 8309: 8281: 8275: 8274: 8272: 8270: 8242: 8236: 8235: 8211: 8205: 8204: 8202: 8200: 8172: 8166: 8165: 8163: 8161: 8133: 8124: 8123: 8121: 8119: 8113: 8102: 8093: 8087: 8081: 8068: 8067: 8065: 8063: 8035: 8029: 8028: 8026: 8024: 8013:DNAinfo New York 8005: 7999: 7998: 7996: 7994: 7974: 7968: 7967: 7965: 7963: 7954:. Archived from 7952:DNAinfo New York 7943: 7937: 7936: 7934: 7932: 7904: 7898: 7897: 7895: 7893: 7872:. pp. 462, 7861: 7855: 7854: 7852: 7850: 7822: 7816: 7810: 7804: 7803: 7801: 7799: 7771: 7765: 7759: 7753: 7752: 7750: 7748: 7720: 7711: 7710: 7708: 7706: 7679: 7673: 7667: 7658: 7657: 7655: 7653: 7626: 7620: 7619: 7617: 7615: 7588: 7582: 7581: 7579: 7577: 7550: 7544: 7543: 7541: 7539: 7511: 7505: 7504: 7480: 7474: 7473: 7449: 7443: 7442: 7440: 7438: 7410: 7404: 7403: 7379: 7370: 7369: 7350: 7344: 7343: 7327: 7318: 7317: 7301: 7292: 7291: 7267: 7261: 7260: 7244: 7238: 7237: 7235: 7233: 7205: 7199: 7198: 7196: 7194: 7166: 7160: 7159: 7141: 7135: 7134: 7110: 7104: 7103: 7101: 7099: 7072: 7061: 7060: 7058: 7056: 7029: 7023: 7022: 6998: 6987: 6986: 6970: 6959: 6958: 6956: 6954: 6927: 6921: 6920: 6896: 6890: 6889: 6865: 6859: 6858: 6834: 6828: 6827: 6825: 6823: 6801: 6795: 6794: 6792: 6790: 6763: 6757: 6756: 6732: 6726: 6725: 6701: 6695: 6689: 6683: 6682: 6680: 6678: 6651: 6645: 6644: 6642: 6640: 6613: 6607: 6606: 6604: 6602: 6574: 6565: 6559: 6544: 6543: 6519: 6513: 6512: 6510: 6508: 6481: 6475: 6474: 6450: 6444: 6443: 6441: 6439: 6412: 6406: 6400: 6394: 6393: 6391: 6389: 6362: 6356: 6355: 6339: 6333: 6332: 6316: 6310: 6309: 6307: 6305: 6278: 6272: 6271: 6255: 6249: 6248: 6224: 6218: 6217: 6215: 6213: 6196:. May 16, 1931. 6186: 6177: 6171: 6160: 6159: 6135: 6129: 6128: 6104: 6098: 6097: 6095: 6093: 6066: 6060: 6059: 6057: 6055: 6028: 6022: 6021: 6019: 6017: 5994: 5985: 5984: 5982: 5980: 5961: 5960: 5958: 5938: 5929: 5928: 5926: 5924: 5905: 5904: 5902: 5882: 5873: 5872: 5870: 5868: 5840: 5834: 5833: 5831: 5829: 5811: 5809: 5807: 5787: 5781: 5780: 5778: 5776: 5748: 5739: 5738: 5736: 5734: 5715: 5714: 5712: 5692: 5683: 5682: 5680: 5678: 5651: 5645: 5644: 5620: 5614: 5613: 5611: 5609: 5582: 5576: 5575: 5551: 5545: 5544: 5520: 5511: 5510: 5486: 5480: 5479: 5477: 5475: 5447: 5441: 5440: 5438: 5436: 5418: 5416: 5414: 5394: 5388: 5387: 5385: 5383: 5364: 5363: 5361: 5341: 5332: 5331: 5329: 5327: 5300: 5294: 5293: 5291: 5289: 5271: 5269: 5267: 5247: 5241: 5240: 5216: 5207: 5206: 5182: 5176: 5175: 5173: 5171: 5149: 5143: 5137: 5128: 5127: 5103: 5097: 5096: 5072: 5066: 5065: 5054:New-York Tribune 5049: 5043: 5042: 5040: 5038: 5019: 5018: 5016: 4996: 4987: 4986: 4984: 4982: 4955: 4949: 4948: 4946: 4944: 4922: 4913: 4912: 4910: 4908: 4889: 4888: 4886: 4866: 4857: 4856: 4854: 4852: 4825: 4816: 4815: 4813: 4811: 4792: 4791: 4789: 4769: 4760: 4754: 4745: 4744: 4742: 4740: 4713: 4707: 4706: 4704: 4702: 4684: 4682: 4680: 4660: 4651: 4650: 4648: 4646: 4619: 4613: 4612: 4601:New-York Tribune 4596: 4590: 4589: 4587: 4585: 4566: 4565: 4563: 4543: 4534: 4533: 4509: 4503: 4502: 4500: 4498: 4471: 4462: 4461: 4459: 4457: 4438: 4437: 4435: 4415: 4406: 4405: 4403: 4401: 4374: 4365: 4364: 4362: 4360: 4341: 4340: 4338: 4318: 4309: 4308: 4306: 4304: 4286: 4284: 4282: 4262: 4256: 4255: 4231: 4225: 4224: 4222: 4220: 4202: 4200: 4198: 4178: 4172: 4171: 4147: 4141: 4140: 4116: 4110: 4109: 4098:New-York Tribune 4093: 4087: 4081: 4060: 4054: 4045: 4044: 4042: 4040: 4021: 4020: 4018: 3998: 3989: 3988: 3986: 3984: 3957: 3951: 3950: 3948: 3946: 3919: 3910: 3909: 3907: 3905: 3886: 3885: 3883: 3863: 3854: 3853: 3851: 3849: 3830: 3829: 3827: 3807: 3798: 3797: 3795: 3793: 3766: 3760: 3754: 3745: 3744: 3742: 3740: 3721: 3720: 3718: 3698: 3689: 3688: 3677:New-York Tribune 3672: 3666: 3660: 3651: 3645: 3634: 3633: 3631: 3629: 3610: 3609: 3607: 3587: 3578: 3572: 3563: 3562: 3560: 3558: 3536: 3530: 3529: 3518:New-York Tribune 3513: 3507: 3506: 3504: 3502: 3475: 3466: 3465: 3441: 3435: 3434: 3432: 3430: 3413: 3405: 3399: 3398: 3374: 3368: 3367: 3361: 3359: 3340: 3334: 3333: 3331: 3329: 3307: 3301: 3300: 3276: 3270: 3269: 3267: 3265: 3238: 3232: 3231: 3229: 3227: 3202:"Julian Eltinge" 3197: 3191: 3190: 3188: 3186: 3158: 3137: 3136: 3134: 3132: 3113: 3104: 3098: 3092: 3086: 3080: 3079: 3077: 3075: 3056: 3050: 3049: 3047: 3045: 3021: 3015: 3014: 3001:"Audio Empire". 2998: 2992: 2991: 2975: 2966: 2965: 2963: 2961: 2950:Cinema Treasures 2941: 2926: 2925: 2909: 2903: 2897: 2891: 2885: 2876: 2870: 2861: 2860: 2858: 2856: 2828: 2809: 2803: 2794: 2788: 2767: 2766: 2750: 2739: 2733: 2720: 2719: 2717: 2715: 2687: 2678: 2677: 2675: 2673: 2645: 2622: 2621: 2605: 2599: 2593: 2584: 2583: 2581: 2579: 2551: 2542: 2536: 2523: 2517: 2498: 2492: 2486: 2480: 2467: 2466: 2464: 2462: 2434: 2428: 2427: 2411: 2402: 2401: 2385: 2376: 2375: 2373: 2371: 2343: 2326: 2325: 2309: 2280: 2274: 2265: 2264: 2250: 2242: 2236: 2235: 2233: 2231: 2203: 2197: 2191: 2180: 2179: 2155: 2149: 2148: 2146: 2144: 2129: 2123: 2122: 2120: 2118: 2093: 2087: 2086: 2084: 2082: 2054: 2043: 2042: 2040: 2038: 2032: 2026:. Archived from 2021: 2013: 2007: 2001: 1992: 1986: 1971: 1965: 1942: 1936: 1927: 1926: 1903: 1888: 1887: 1885: 1883: 1864: 1838: 1831: 1825: 1797:The sites were: 1795: 1467: 1456: 1454: 1450: 1376: 1375: 1371: 1325:Last Action Hero 1294:, and funded by 1074:Laurence Olivier 1017:Shubert brothers 1013:Lionel Barrymore 804:Legitimate shows 637:Christopher Gray 534: 528: 522: 516: 510: 504: 498: 492: 486: 480: 455:is to the west, 413:Candler Building 374:Theater District 276:Theater District 266:(originally the 256: 253: 251: 249: 247: 245: 112: 111: 109: 108: 107: 102: 98: 95: 94: 93: 90: 51: 37: 33: 21: 12652: 12651: 12647: 12646: 12645: 12643: 12642: 12641: 12577: 12576: 12575: 12570: 12554: 12516: 12497: 12421: 12390: 12332: 12313: 12267: 12206: 12186: 12167: 12128:Liberty Theatre 12108:Garrick Theatre 12071: 12033: 12014:The Roger Hotel 11967: 11931: 11876: 11857: 11853:Waldorf–Astoria 11821: 11742:Chanin Building 11642: 11636: 11461: 11450: 11437: 11428: 11398: 11385: 11371:Olympic Theatre 11341:Booth's Theatre 11314: 11290:Theatre Comique 11265:Olympic Theatre 11185:Central Theatre 11165:Bandbox Theatre 11143: 11139:Waldorf Theatre 11084:Garrick Theatre 11054:Concert Theatre 11034:Century Theatre 11024:Casino de Paris 11009:Belmont Theatre 10967: 10933:Morosco Theatre 10883:Adelphi Theatre 10862: 10843: 10838:New 42nd Street 10818:New 42nd Street 10799:Liberty Theatre 10761: 10755: 10698: 10669: 10620: 10591:Marquis Theatre 10561: 10552:Shubert Theatre 10482:Belasco Theatre 10458: 10447: 10438: 10433: 10387: 10386: 10383: 10357: 10334: 10286: 10241: 10231: 10211: 10206: 10205: 10195: 10193: 10180: 10173: 10171: 10156: 10152: 10142: 10140: 10127: 10120: 10118: 10103: 10099: 10079: 10075: 10068: 10046: 10042: 10032: 10030: 10021: 10020: 10013: 10011: 10001: 9997: 9987: 9985: 9972: 9965: 9963: 9948: 9944: 9934: 9932: 9919: 9912: 9910: 9895: 9891: 9881: 9879: 9870: 9869: 9865: 9855: 9853: 9838:Washington Post 9832: 9831: 9827: 9817: 9815: 9802: 9801: 9797: 9787: 9785: 9770: 9766: 9756: 9754: 9731: 9727: 9717: 9715: 9692: 9688: 9669: 9665: 9659:McClintock 2011 9657: 9653: 9626: 9622: 9603: 9599: 9580: 9576: 9566: 9564: 9541: 9537: 9527: 9525: 9505: 9496: 9486: 9484: 9461: 9454: 9444: 9442: 9419: 9415: 9405: 9403: 9380: 9376: 9350: 9349: 9340: 9330: 9328: 9318:Chicago Tribune 9312: 9311: 9304: 9294: 9292: 9271: 9270: 9266: 9256: 9254: 9231: 9224: 9214: 9212: 9189: 9185: 9175: 9173: 9152: 9151: 9147: 9137: 9135: 9112: 9108: 9098: 9096: 9092: 9081: 9077: 9076: 9063: 9053: 9051: 9028: 9024: 9014: 9012: 8989: 8985: 8975: 8973: 8950: 8946: 8936: 8934: 8930: 8919: 8915: 8914: 8910: 8883: 8879: 8869: 8867: 8850:. pp. 69, 8840: 8836: 8826: 8824: 8801: 8797: 8770: 8766: 8756: 8754: 8731: 8727: 8719: 8715: 8688: 8684: 8674: 8672: 8649: 8645: 8618: 8611: 8601: 8599: 8576: 8569: 8561: 8557: 8547: 8545: 8522: 8518: 8508: 8506: 8483: 8479: 8469: 8467: 8444: 8440: 8430: 8428: 8405: 8401: 8393: 8382: 8372: 8370: 8347: 8340: 8322: 8321: 8317: 8307: 8305: 8282: 8278: 8268: 8266: 8243: 8239: 8212: 8208: 8198: 8196: 8173: 8169: 8159: 8157: 8134: 8127: 8117: 8115: 8111: 8100: 8094: 8090: 8082: 8071: 8061: 8059: 8036: 8032: 8022: 8020: 8007: 8006: 8002: 7992: 7990: 7975: 7971: 7961: 7959: 7944: 7940: 7930: 7928: 7905: 7901: 7891: 7889: 7862: 7858: 7848: 7846: 7823: 7819: 7811: 7807: 7797: 7795: 7772: 7768: 7760: 7756: 7746: 7744: 7721: 7714: 7704: 7702: 7681: 7680: 7676: 7668: 7661: 7651: 7649: 7628: 7627: 7623: 7613: 7611: 7590: 7589: 7585: 7575: 7573: 7552: 7551: 7547: 7537: 7535: 7512: 7508: 7481: 7477: 7450: 7446: 7436: 7434: 7411: 7407: 7380: 7373: 7360:. p. SM2. 7351: 7347: 7329: 7328: 7321: 7303: 7302: 7295: 7269: 7268: 7264: 7246: 7245: 7241: 7231: 7229: 7206: 7202: 7192: 7190: 7167: 7163: 7143: 7142: 7138: 7112: 7111: 7107: 7097: 7095: 7074: 7073: 7064: 7054: 7052: 7031: 7030: 7026: 7000: 6999: 6990: 6972: 6971: 6962: 6952: 6950: 6929: 6928: 6924: 6898: 6897: 6893: 6867: 6866: 6862: 6835: 6831: 6821: 6819: 6803: 6802: 6798: 6788: 6786: 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3959: 3958: 3954: 3944: 3942: 3921: 3920: 3913: 3903: 3901: 3888: 3881: 3879: 3864: 3857: 3847: 3845: 3832: 3825: 3823: 3808: 3801: 3791: 3789: 3768: 3767: 3763: 3755: 3748: 3738: 3736: 3723: 3716: 3714: 3699: 3692: 3674: 3673: 3669: 3661: 3654: 3646: 3637: 3627: 3625: 3612: 3605: 3603: 3588: 3581: 3573: 3566: 3556: 3554: 3538: 3537: 3533: 3515: 3514: 3510: 3500: 3498: 3477: 3476: 3469: 3443: 3442: 3438: 3428: 3426: 3411: 3407: 3406: 3402: 3376: 3375: 3371: 3357: 3355: 3342: 3341: 3337: 3327: 3325: 3309: 3308: 3304: 3278: 3277: 3273: 3263: 3261: 3240: 3239: 3235: 3225: 3223: 3216: 3198: 3194: 3184: 3182: 3159: 3140: 3130: 3128: 3115: 3114: 3107: 3099: 3095: 3087: 3083: 3073: 3071: 3058: 3057: 3053: 3043: 3041: 3022: 3018: 3000: 2999: 2995: 2976: 2969: 2959: 2957: 2946:"AMC Empire 25" 2944:Melnick, Ross. 2942: 2929: 2910: 2906: 2900:McClintock 2011 2898: 2894: 2888:McClintock 2011 2886: 2879: 2871: 2864: 2854: 2852: 2829: 2812: 2806:McClintock 2011 2804: 2797: 2789: 2770: 2752: 2751: 2742: 2736:McClintock 2011 2734: 2723: 2713: 2711: 2688: 2681: 2671: 2669: 2646: 2625: 2607: 2606: 2602: 2594: 2587: 2577: 2575: 2552: 2545: 2537: 2526: 2518: 2501: 2493: 2489: 2481: 2470: 2460: 2458: 2435: 2431: 2412: 2405: 2386: 2379: 2369: 2367: 2354:. p. 775. 2344: 2329: 2310: 2283: 2275: 2268: 2248: 2244: 2243: 2239: 2229: 2227: 2204: 2200: 2192: 2183: 2157: 2156: 2152: 2142: 2140: 2131: 2130: 2126: 2116: 2114: 2095: 2094: 2090: 2080: 2078: 2055: 2046: 2036: 2034: 2033:on July 7, 2011 2030: 2024:New 42nd Street 2019: 2015: 2014: 2010: 2002: 1995: 1987: 1974: 1966: 1945: 1937: 1930: 1923: 1904: 1891: 1881: 1879: 1866: 1865: 1852: 1847: 1842: 1841: 1832: 1828: 1796: 1792: 1787: 1782: 1770: 1757:The Ninth Guest 1701:The Ghost Train 1673:Spring Cleaning 1617:The Demi-Virgin 1533:Fair and Warmer 1452: 1446: 1399: 1387:Who's on First? 1373: 1369: 1368: 1338: 1328:in 1993. After 1264: 1231:Graduate Center 1223: 1218: 1164:Liberty Theatre 1151: 1114: 1097:The Ninth Guest 1094:; and the play 1039:The Ghost Train 996:Spring Cleaning 975:The Demi-Virgin 971:The Demi-Virgin 966:The Demi-Virgin 954: 930:Wilson Collison 889:Fair and Warmer 847:Putnam Building 823:Liberty Theatre 811: 806: 778: 762:stadium seating 750: 740:. According to 705: 703:Original design 692: 624: 598:. Known as the 576: 530: 524: 518: 512: 506: 500: 494: 488: 482: 476: 390:Liberty Theatre 354: 268:Eltinge Theatre 250:/movie-theatres 242: 231:New 42nd Street 209: 207: 205: 158: 105: 103: 99: 96: 91: 88: 86: 84: 83: 72: 67: 54: 42: 30: 23: 22: 18:Eltinge Theatre 15: 12: 11: 5: 12650: 12640: 12639: 12634: 12629: 12624: 12619: 12614: 12609: 12604: 12599: 12594: 12589: 12572: 12571: 12563: 12560: 12559: 12556: 12555: 12553: 12552: 12547: 12542: 12537: 12532: 12527: 12521: 12518: 12517: 12515:Related topics 12507: 12506: 12503: 12502: 12499: 12498: 12496: 12495: 12490: 12485: 12483:Madison Avenue 12480: 12475: 12470: 12465: 12460: 12455: 12450: 12448:Seventh Avenue 12445: 12440: 12435: 12429: 12427: 12423: 12422: 12420: 12419: 12414: 12409: 12404: 12398: 12396: 12392: 12391: 12389: 12388: 12383: 12378: 12373: 12368: 12363: 12358: 12353: 12347: 12345: 12334: 12333: 12331:Transportation 12323: 12322: 12319: 12318: 12315: 12314: 12312: 12311: 12306: 12301: 12296: 12291: 12286: 12281: 12275: 12273: 12269: 12268: 12266: 12265: 12260: 12255: 12250: 12245: 12240: 12235: 12230: 12225: 12220: 12214: 12212: 12208: 12207: 12205: 12204: 12198: 12196: 12188: 12187: 12177: 12176: 12173: 12172: 12169: 12168: 12166: 12165: 12160: 12155: 12150: 12145: 12140: 12135: 12130: 12125: 12120: 12115: 12110: 12105: 12100: 12095: 12090: 12085: 12079: 12077: 12073: 12072: 12070: 12069: 12068: 12067: 12057: 12052: 12047: 12041: 12039: 12035: 12034: 12032: 12031: 12026: 12021: 12016: 12011: 12006: 12001: 11996: 11991: 11986: 11981: 11975: 11973: 11969: 11968: 11966: 11965: 11960: 11955: 11950: 11945: 11939: 11937: 11933: 11932: 11930: 11929: 11924: 11919: 11914: 11909: 11904: 11899: 11894: 11888: 11886: 11878: 11877: 11867: 11866: 11863: 11862: 11859: 11858: 11856: 11855: 11850: 11845: 11840: 11835: 11829: 11827: 11823: 11822: 11820: 11819: 11814: 11809: 11804: 11799: 11794: 11789: 11784: 11779: 11769: 11764: 11759: 11754: 11749: 11744: 11739: 11734: 11729: 11724: 11719: 11717:275 Madison Av 11714: 11712:200 Madison Av 11709: 11704: 11699: 11694: 11689: 11684: 11679: 11674: 11669: 11664: 11659: 11653: 11651: 11638: 11637: 11635: 11634: 11629: 11624: 11619: 11614: 11609: 11604: 11599: 11594: 11592:Manhattan Mall 11589: 11584: 11579: 11574: 11569: 11564: 11559: 11554: 11549: 11544: 11539: 11534: 11529: 11524: 11519: 11514: 11509: 11504: 11499: 11494: 11489: 11484: 11479: 11477:One Penn Plaza 11473: 11471: 11463: 11462: 11452: 11451: 11442: 11439: 11438: 11427: 11426: 11419: 11412: 11404: 11395: 11394: 11391: 11390: 11387: 11386: 11384: 11383: 11378: 11373: 11368: 11363: 11358: 11353: 11348: 11343: 11338: 11333: 11328: 11322: 11320: 11316: 11315: 11313: 11312: 11307: 11302: 11297: 11292: 11287: 11282: 11277: 11272: 11267: 11262: 11260:Niblo's Garden 11257: 11252: 11247: 11242: 11237: 11232: 11227: 11225:Lyceum Theatre 11222: 11217: 11215:Hoyt's Theatre 11212: 11207: 11202: 11200:Garden Theatre 11197: 11195:Daly's Theatre 11192: 11190:Circle Theatre 11187: 11182: 11177: 11172: 11167: 11162: 11157: 11151: 11149: 11145: 11144: 11142: 11141: 11136: 11131: 11126: 11121: 11116: 11111: 11106: 11101: 11096: 11091: 11086: 11081: 11079:Gaiety Theatre 11076: 11071: 11066: 11061: 11056: 11051: 11049:Comedy Theatre 11046: 11041: 11036: 11031: 11029:Casino Theatre 11026: 11021: 11016: 11014:Bowery Theatre 11011: 11006: 11001: 10996: 10991: 10986: 10981: 10975: 10973: 10969: 10968: 10966: 10965: 10960: 10955: 10953:Rialto Theatre 10950: 10945: 10940: 10935: 10930: 10925: 10920: 10915: 10913:Fulton Theatre 10910: 10908:Empire Theatre 10905: 10900: 10898:Center Theatre 10895: 10890: 10888:Apollo Theatre 10885: 10880: 10874: 10872: 10864: 10863: 10853: 10852: 10849: 10848: 10845: 10844: 10842: 10841: 10831: 10821: 10811: 10801: 10796: 10789:Empire Theatre 10786: 10779:Edison Theatre 10776: 10765: 10763: 10760:Extant former 10757: 10756: 10754: 10753: 10750:Lincoln Center 10743: 10733: 10723: 10713: 10706: 10704: 10700: 10699: 10697: 10696: 10691: 10686: 10680: 10678: 10671: 10670: 10668: 10667: 10662: 10657: 10652: 10650:Hudson Theatre 10647: 10642: 10637: 10631: 10629: 10622: 10621: 10619: 10618: 10613: 10611:Palace Theatre 10608: 10603: 10598: 10593: 10588: 10583: 10578: 10572: 10570: 10563: 10562: 10560: 10559: 10554: 10549: 10544: 10539: 10537:Lyceum Theatre 10534: 10529: 10524: 10519: 10514: 10509: 10504: 10499: 10494: 10489: 10484: 10479: 10473: 10471: 10460: 10459: 10449: 10448: 10443: 10440: 10439: 10432: 10431: 10424: 10417: 10409: 10403: 10402: 10396:Empire Theatre 10393: 10382: 10381:External links 10379: 10378: 10377: 10355: 10338: 10332: 10319: 10298: 10284: 10267: 10250: 10235: 10229: 10210: 10207: 10204: 10203: 10150: 10097: 10073: 10066: 10040: 9995: 9942: 9889: 9863: 9825: 9795: 9764: 9725: 9686: 9663: 9651: 9632:. p. 14. 9620: 9597: 9574: 9545:"Off the Menu" 9535: 9494: 9452: 9413: 9374: 9338: 9302: 9264: 9222: 9183: 9145: 9106: 9061: 9022: 8983: 8944: 8908: 8877: 8834: 8795: 8764: 8725: 8723:, p. 693. 8713: 8682: 8659:. p. 42. 8643: 8609: 8567: 8565:, p. 205. 8555: 8516: 8477: 8438: 8399: 8397:, p. 682. 8380: 8338: 8315: 8276: 8237: 8206: 8177:"Reality News" 8167: 8125: 8088: 8086:, p. 683. 8069: 8030: 8000: 7983:New York YIMBY 7969: 7938: 7899: 7856: 7817: 7815:, p. 691. 7805: 7766: 7764:, p. 681. 7754: 7712: 7674: 7672:, p. 679. 7659: 7621: 7583: 7545: 7506: 7475: 7444: 7405: 7371: 7345: 7319: 7293: 7262: 7239: 7200: 7161: 7136: 7105: 7062: 7024: 6988: 6960: 6922: 6891: 6860: 6841:. p. E2. 6829: 6796: 6758: 6727: 6696: 6684: 6646: 6608: 6585:. p. 33. 6566: 6564:, p. 154. 6545: 6514: 6476: 6445: 6407: 6395: 6357: 6334: 6311: 6273: 6262:. p. D3. 6250: 6219: 6178: 6161: 6130: 6099: 6061: 6023: 5986: 5930: 5874: 5835: 5782: 5740: 5684: 5646: 5615: 5577: 5546: 5512: 5481: 5442: 5389: 5333: 5295: 5242: 5208: 5177: 5144: 5129: 5098: 5067: 5044: 4988: 4950: 4914: 4858: 4817: 4761: 4759:, p. 152. 4746: 4708: 4652: 4614: 4591: 4535: 4504: 4463: 4407: 4366: 4310: 4257: 4226: 4173: 4142: 4111: 4088: 4086:, p. 151. 4061: 4046: 3990: 3952: 3911: 3855: 3799: 3761: 3759:, p. 150. 3746: 3690: 3667: 3665:, p. 148. 3652: 3635: 3579: 3564: 3531: 3508: 3467: 3436: 3400: 3369: 3335: 3302: 3271: 3233: 3214: 3192: 3138: 3105: 3093: 3081: 3051: 3016: 2993: 2967: 2927: 2904: 2892: 2877: 2875:, p. 220. 2862: 2810: 2795: 2793:, p. 153. 2768: 2740: 2721: 2679: 2623: 2600: 2598:, p. 147. 2585: 2543: 2524: 2499: 2487: 2485:, p. 216. 2468: 2429: 2403: 2377: 2327: 2281: 2279:, p. 143. 2266: 2237: 2198: 2196:, p. 675. 2181: 2150: 2124: 2088: 2044: 2008: 2006:, p. 139. 1993: 1991:, p. 712. 1972: 1970:, p. 218. 1943: 1928: 1921: 1889: 1849: 1848: 1846: 1843: 1840: 1839: 1835:Palace Theatre 1826: 1824: 1823: 1816: 1814:5 Times Square 1810: 1808:4 Times Square 1804: 1802:3 Times Square 1789: 1788: 1786: 1783: 1781: 1778: 1777: 1776: 1769: 1766: 1763: 1762: 1760: 1753: 1749: 1748: 1746: 1739: 1735: 1734: 1732: 1725: 1721: 1720: 1718: 1715:The Love Thief 1711: 1707: 1706: 1704: 1697: 1693: 1692: 1690: 1683: 1679: 1678: 1676: 1669: 1665: 1664: 1662: 1655: 1651: 1650: 1648: 1641: 1637: 1636: 1634: 1631:Blood and Sand 1627: 1623: 1622: 1620: 1613: 1609: 1608: 1606: 1599: 1595: 1594: 1592: 1585: 1581: 1580: 1578: 1571: 1567: 1566: 1564: 1557: 1553: 1552: 1550: 1543: 1539: 1538: 1536: 1529: 1525: 1524: 1522: 1515: 1511: 1510: 1508: 1501: 1497: 1496: 1494: 1487: 1483: 1482: 1480: 1477:Within the Law 1473: 1469: 1468: 1463: 1460: 1445: 1442: 1418:Focus Features 1398: 1395: 1337: 1334: 1312:eminent domain 1290:, operated by 1288:Tishman Speyer 1263: 1260: 1222: 1219: 1217: 1214: 1150: 1147: 1113: 1110: 953: 950: 922:Alexander Carr 918:Barney Bernard 878:Edward Sheldon 874:John Barrymore 859:Within the Law 854:Bayard Veiller 810: 807: 805: 802: 797:Julian Eltinge 793:Madison Square 777: 774: 749: 748:Current design 746: 738:Arthur Brounet 734:sounding board 704: 701: 696:superstructure 691: 688: 629:triumphal arch 623: 620: 616:Rockwell Group 584:Thomas W. Lamb 575: 572: 449:3 Times Square 421:5 Times Square 362:Seventh Avenue 353: 350: 328:Within the Law 320:sounding board 316:triumphal arch 296:Julian Eltinge 288:Thomas W. Lamb 270:) is a former 264:Empire Theatre 258: 257: 254:/amc-empire-25 252:/new-york-city 239: 238: 234: 233: 227: 226: 222: 221: 219:Thomas W. Lamb 216: 212: 211: 202: 198: 197: 194: 190: 189: 186: 182: 181: 178: 174: 173: 170: 166: 165: 161: 160: 159:originally 750 155: 149: 148: 143: 139: 138: 133: 129: 128: 118: 114: 113: 81: 75: 74: 64: 60: 59: 56: 55: 52: 44: 43: 40: 28: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 12649: 12638: 12635: 12633: 12630: 12628: 12625: 12623: 12620: 12618: 12615: 12613: 12610: 12608: 12605: 12603: 12600: 12598: 12595: 12593: 12590: 12588: 12585: 12584: 12582: 12569: 12566: 12561: 12551: 12548: 12546: 12543: 12541: 12538: 12536: 12533: 12531: 12528: 12526: 12523: 12522: 12519: 12512: 12508: 12494: 12491: 12489: 12486: 12484: 12481: 12479: 12476: 12474: 12473:Herald Square 12471: 12469: 12466: 12464: 12461: 12459: 12456: 12454: 12453:Eighth Avenue 12451: 12449: 12446: 12444: 12441: 12439: 12436: 12434: 12431: 12430: 12428: 12424: 12418: 12415: 12413: 12410: 12408: 12405: 12403: 12400: 12399: 12397: 12393: 12387: 12384: 12382: 12379: 12377: 12374: 12372: 12369: 12367: 12364: 12362: 12359: 12357: 12354: 12352: 12349: 12348: 12346: 12343: 12339: 12335: 12328: 12324: 12310: 12307: 12305: 12302: 12300: 12297: 12295: 12292: 12290: 12287: 12285: 12282: 12280: 12277: 12276: 12274: 12270: 12264: 12261: 12259: 12256: 12254: 12251: 12249: 12246: 12244: 12241: 12239: 12236: 12234: 12231: 12229: 12226: 12224: 12221: 12219: 12216: 12215: 12213: 12209: 12203: 12200: 12199: 12197: 12193: 12189: 12182: 12178: 12164: 12163:Savoy Theatre 12161: 12159: 12156: 12154: 12151: 12149: 12146: 12144: 12143:Morgans Hotel 12141: 12139: 12136: 12134: 12131: 12129: 12126: 12124: 12121: 12119: 12116: 12114: 12111: 12109: 12106: 12104: 12101: 12099: 12096: 12094: 12091: 12089: 12088:Belmont Hotel 12086: 12084: 12081: 12080: 12078: 12074: 12066: 12063: 12062: 12061: 12058: 12056: 12053: 12051: 12048: 12046: 12045:AMC Empire 25 12043: 12042: 12040: 12036: 12030: 12027: 12025: 12024:Hotel Wolcott 12022: 12020: 12019:The Wilbraham 12017: 12015: 12012: 12010: 12007: 12005: 12004:Hotel McAlpin 12002: 12000: 11997: 11995: 11994:Library Hotel 11992: 11990: 11987: 11985: 11982: 11980: 11977: 11976: 11974: 11970: 11964: 11961: 11959: 11956: 11954: 11951: 11949: 11946: 11944: 11941: 11940: 11938: 11934: 11928: 11925: 11923: 11920: 11918: 11915: 11913: 11910: 11908: 11905: 11903: 11900: 11898: 11895: 11893: 11890: 11889: 11887: 11883: 11879: 11872: 11868: 11854: 11851: 11849: 11846: 11844: 11841: 11839: 11836: 11834: 11831: 11830: 11828: 11824: 11818: 11817:Williams Club 11815: 11813: 11810: 11808: 11805: 11803: 11800: 11798: 11795: 11793: 11790: 11788: 11785: 11783: 11780: 11777: 11773: 11770: 11768: 11765: 11763: 11760: 11758: 11755: 11753: 11750: 11748: 11745: 11743: 11740: 11738: 11735: 11733: 11730: 11728: 11725: 11723: 11720: 11718: 11715: 11713: 11710: 11708: 11705: 11703: 11700: 11698: 11697:110 E 42nd St 11695: 11693: 11690: 11688: 11685: 11683: 11680: 11678: 11675: 11673: 11670: 11668: 11665: 11663: 11660: 11658: 11655: 11654: 11652: 11649: 11639: 11633: 11630: 11628: 11625: 11623: 11620: 11618: 11615: 11613: 11610: 11608: 11605: 11603: 11600: 11598: 11595: 11593: 11590: 11588: 11585: 11583: 11580: 11578: 11575: 11573: 11570: 11568: 11565: 11563: 11560: 11558: 11555: 11553: 11550: 11548: 11545: 11543: 11540: 11538: 11535: 11533: 11530: 11528: 11525: 11523: 11520: 11518: 11515: 11513: 11510: 11508: 11505: 11503: 11500: 11498: 11497:130 W 30th St 11495: 11493: 11492:15 Penn Plaza 11490: 11488: 11485: 11483: 11480: 11478: 11475: 11474: 11472: 11468: 11464: 11457: 11453: 11449: 11448:New York City 11445: 11440: 11436: 11435:Midtown South 11432: 11425: 11420: 11418: 11413: 11411: 11406: 11405: 11402: 11382: 11379: 11377: 11374: 11372: 11369: 11367: 11364: 11362: 11359: 11357: 11354: 11352: 11349: 11347: 11344: 11342: 11339: 11337: 11334: 11332: 11329: 11327: 11324: 11323: 11321: 11317: 11311: 11308: 11306: 11303: 11301: 11298: 11296: 11293: 11291: 11288: 11286: 11283: 11281: 11280:Savoy Theatre 11278: 11276: 11273: 11271: 11268: 11266: 11263: 11261: 11258: 11256: 11253: 11251: 11248: 11246: 11243: 11241: 11238: 11236: 11233: 11231: 11228: 11226: 11223: 11221: 11218: 11216: 11213: 11211: 11208: 11206: 11203: 11201: 11198: 11196: 11193: 11191: 11188: 11186: 11183: 11181: 11178: 11176: 11175:Bijou Theatre 11173: 11171: 11168: 11166: 11163: 11161: 11158: 11156: 11153: 11152: 11150: 11146: 11140: 11137: 11135: 11132: 11130: 11127: 11125: 11122: 11120: 11117: 11115: 11112: 11110: 11107: 11105: 11102: 11100: 11097: 11095: 11092: 11090: 11087: 11085: 11082: 11080: 11077: 11075: 11072: 11070: 11067: 11065: 11062: 11060: 11057: 11055: 11052: 11050: 11047: 11045: 11042: 11040: 11037: 11035: 11032: 11030: 11027: 11025: 11022: 11020: 11017: 11015: 11012: 11010: 11007: 11005: 11004:Astor Theatre 11002: 11000: 10997: 10995: 10992: 10990: 10987: 10985: 10982: 10980: 10977: 10976: 10974: 10970: 10964: 10961: 10959: 10956: 10954: 10951: 10949: 10946: 10944: 10941: 10939: 10936: 10934: 10931: 10929: 10926: 10924: 10923:Latin Quarter 10921: 10919: 10916: 10914: 10911: 10909: 10906: 10904: 10901: 10899: 10896: 10894: 10893:Bijou Theatre 10891: 10889: 10886: 10884: 10881: 10879: 10876: 10875: 10873: 10869: 10865: 10858: 10854: 10839: 10835: 10832: 10829: 10825: 10822: 10819: 10815: 10812: 10809: 10805: 10802: 10800: 10797: 10794: 10790: 10787: 10784: 10780: 10777: 10774: 10770: 10767: 10766: 10764: 10758: 10751: 10747: 10744: 10741: 10737: 10734: 10731: 10727: 10724: 10721: 10717: 10716:Hayes Theater 10714: 10712:(independent) 10711: 10708: 10707: 10705: 10701: 10695: 10692: 10690: 10687: 10685: 10682: 10681: 10679: 10676: 10672: 10666: 10663: 10661: 10658: 10656: 10655:Lyric Theatre 10653: 10651: 10648: 10646: 10643: 10641: 10638: 10636: 10633: 10632: 10630: 10627: 10623: 10617: 10614: 10612: 10609: 10607: 10604: 10602: 10599: 10597: 10594: 10592: 10589: 10587: 10584: 10582: 10579: 10577: 10574: 10573: 10571: 10568: 10564: 10558: 10555: 10553: 10550: 10548: 10545: 10543: 10540: 10538: 10535: 10533: 10530: 10528: 10525: 10523: 10520: 10518: 10515: 10513: 10510: 10508: 10505: 10503: 10500: 10498: 10495: 10493: 10492:Booth Theatre 10490: 10488: 10485: 10483: 10480: 10478: 10475: 10474: 10472: 10469: 10465: 10461: 10454: 10450: 10446: 10441: 10437: 10430: 10425: 10423: 10418: 10416: 10411: 10410: 10407: 10401: 10397: 10394: 10390: 10385: 10384: 10374: 10370: 10366: 10362: 10358: 10352: 10347: 10346: 10339: 10335: 10333:0-486-40244-4 10329: 10325: 10320: 10316: 10312: 10308: 10304: 10299: 10295: 10291: 10287: 10281: 10276: 10275: 10268: 10264: 10260: 10256: 10251: 10247: 10240: 10236: 10232: 10226: 10221: 10220: 10213: 10212: 10196:September 25, 10191: 10187: 10183: 10174:September 25, 10169: 10165: 10161: 10154: 10143:September 25, 10138: 10134: 10130: 10121:September 25, 10116: 10112: 10108: 10101: 10093: 10089: 10085: 10077: 10069: 10067:9780786453092 10063: 10059: 10055: 10051: 10044: 10028: 10024: 10010: 10006: 9999: 9988:September 25, 9983: 9979: 9975: 9966:September 25, 9961: 9957: 9953: 9946: 9935:September 25, 9930: 9926: 9922: 9913:September 25, 9908: 9904: 9900: 9893: 9877: 9873: 9867: 9856:September 27, 9851: 9847: 9843: 9839: 9835: 9829: 9818:September 27, 9813: 9809: 9805: 9799: 9788:September 27, 9783: 9779: 9775: 9768: 9757:September 27, 9752: 9748: 9744: 9740: 9736: 9729: 9718:September 27, 9713: 9709: 9705: 9701: 9697: 9690: 9682: 9678: 9674: 9667: 9660: 9655: 9647: 9643: 9639: 9635: 9631: 9624: 9616: 9612: 9608: 9601: 9593: 9589: 9585: 9578: 9567:September 27, 9562: 9558: 9554: 9550: 9546: 9539: 9524: 9520: 9516: 9515: 9510: 9503: 9501: 9499: 9487:September 27, 9482: 9478: 9474: 9470: 9466: 9459: 9457: 9445:September 24, 9440: 9436: 9432: 9428: 9424: 9417: 9406:September 23, 9401: 9397: 9393: 9389: 9385: 9378: 9370: 9366: 9362: 9358: 9354: 9347: 9345: 9343: 9331:September 23, 9327: 9323: 9319: 9315: 9309: 9307: 9295:September 27, 9290: 9286: 9282: 9278: 9274: 9268: 9257:September 23, 9252: 9248: 9244: 9240: 9236: 9229: 9227: 9215:September 23, 9210: 9206: 9202: 9198: 9194: 9187: 9176:September 23, 9171: 9167: 9163: 9159: 9155: 9149: 9138:September 23, 9133: 9129: 9125: 9121: 9117: 9110: 9099:September 28, 9091: 9087: 9080: 9074: 9072: 9070: 9068: 9066: 9054:September 27, 9049: 9045: 9041: 9037: 9033: 9026: 9015:September 27, 9010: 9006: 9002: 8998: 8994: 8987: 8971: 8967: 8963: 8959: 8955: 8948: 8929: 8925: 8918: 8912: 8904: 8900: 8896: 8892: 8888: 8881: 8865: 8861: 8857: 8853: 8849: 8845: 8838: 8822: 8818: 8814: 8811:. p. 2. 8810: 8806: 8799: 8791: 8787: 8783: 8779: 8775: 8768: 8752: 8748: 8744: 8740: 8736: 8729: 8722: 8717: 8709: 8705: 8701: 8697: 8693: 8686: 8670: 8666: 8662: 8658: 8654: 8647: 8639: 8635: 8631: 8627: 8623: 8616: 8614: 8602:September 27, 8597: 8593: 8589: 8585: 8581: 8574: 8572: 8564: 8559: 8543: 8539: 8535: 8531: 8527: 8520: 8504: 8500: 8496: 8492: 8488: 8481: 8465: 8461: 8457: 8453: 8449: 8442: 8431:September 27, 8426: 8422: 8418: 8414: 8410: 8403: 8396: 8391: 8389: 8387: 8385: 8368: 8364: 8360: 8356: 8352: 8345: 8343: 8334: 8330: 8326: 8319: 8308:September 17, 8303: 8299: 8295: 8291: 8287: 8280: 8269:September 27, 8264: 8260: 8256: 8252: 8248: 8241: 8233: 8229: 8225: 8221: 8217: 8210: 8194: 8190: 8186: 8182: 8178: 8171: 8160:September 17, 8155: 8151: 8147: 8143: 8139: 8132: 8130: 8110: 8106: 8099: 8092: 8085: 8080: 8078: 8076: 8074: 8057: 8053: 8049: 8045: 8041: 8034: 8023:September 30, 8018: 8014: 8010: 8004: 7993:September 30, 7988: 7984: 7980: 7973: 7962:September 30, 7957: 7953: 7949: 7942: 7926: 7922: 7918: 7914: 7910: 7903: 7892:September 16, 7887: 7883: 7879: 7875: 7871: 7867: 7860: 7844: 7840: 7836: 7832: 7828: 7821: 7814: 7809: 7793: 7789: 7785: 7781: 7777: 7770: 7763: 7758: 7747:September 27, 7742: 7738: 7734: 7730: 7726: 7719: 7717: 7700: 7696: 7692: 7688: 7684: 7678: 7671: 7666: 7664: 7647: 7643: 7639: 7635: 7631: 7625: 7609: 7605: 7601: 7597: 7593: 7587: 7571: 7567: 7563: 7559: 7555: 7549: 7533: 7529: 7525: 7521: 7517: 7510: 7502: 7498: 7494: 7490: 7487:. p. 1. 7486: 7479: 7471: 7467: 7463: 7459: 7455: 7448: 7432: 7428: 7424: 7420: 7416: 7409: 7401: 7397: 7393: 7389: 7385: 7378: 7376: 7367: 7363: 7359: 7358: 7349: 7341: 7337: 7333: 7326: 7324: 7315: 7311: 7307: 7300: 7298: 7289: 7285: 7281: 7277: 7273: 7266: 7258: 7254: 7250: 7243: 7227: 7223: 7219: 7215: 7211: 7204: 7188: 7184: 7180: 7176: 7172: 7165: 7157: 7153: 7149: 7148: 7140: 7132: 7128: 7124: 7120: 7116: 7109: 7093: 7089: 7085: 7081: 7077: 7071: 7069: 7067: 7055:September 26, 7050: 7046: 7042: 7038: 7034: 7028: 7020: 7016: 7012: 7008: 7004: 6997: 6995: 6993: 6984: 6980: 6976: 6969: 6967: 6965: 6953:September 21, 6948: 6944: 6940: 6936: 6932: 6926: 6918: 6914: 6910: 6906: 6902: 6895: 6887: 6883: 6879: 6875: 6871: 6864: 6856: 6852: 6848: 6844: 6840: 6833: 6822:September 26, 6818: 6814: 6810: 6806: 6800: 6789:September 26, 6784: 6780: 6776: 6772: 6768: 6762: 6754: 6750: 6746: 6742: 6738: 6737:The Billboard 6731: 6723: 6719: 6715: 6711: 6707: 6700: 6694:, p. 74. 6693: 6688: 6677:September 26, 6672: 6668: 6664: 6660: 6656: 6650: 6639:September 26, 6634: 6630: 6626: 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25, 3843: 3839: 3835: 3826:September 25, 3821: 3817: 3813: 3806: 3804: 3792:September 25, 3787: 3783: 3779: 3775: 3771: 3765: 3758: 3753: 3751: 3739:September 25, 3734: 3730: 3726: 3717:September 25, 3712: 3708: 3704: 3697: 3695: 3686: 3682: 3678: 3671: 3664: 3659: 3657: 3650:, p. 67. 3649: 3644: 3642: 3640: 3628:September 25, 3623: 3619: 3615: 3606:September 25, 3601: 3597: 3593: 3586: 3584: 3576: 3571: 3569: 3557:September 25, 3553: 3549: 3545: 3541: 3535: 3527: 3523: 3519: 3512: 3501:September 25, 3496: 3492: 3488: 3484: 3480: 3474: 3472: 3463: 3459: 3455: 3451: 3447: 3446:The Billboard 3440: 3425: 3421: 3417: 3410: 3404: 3396: 3392: 3388: 3384: 3380: 3373: 3365: 3358:September 28, 3353: 3349: 3345: 3339: 3328:September 25, 3324: 3320: 3316: 3312: 3306: 3298: 3294: 3290: 3286: 3282: 3281:The Billboard 3275: 3264:September 25, 3259: 3255: 3251: 3247: 3243: 3237: 3226:September 28, 3221: 3217: 3211: 3207: 3203: 3196: 3185:September 23, 3180: 3176: 3172: 3168: 3164: 3157: 3155: 3153: 3151: 3149: 3147: 3145: 3143: 3126: 3122: 3118: 3112: 3110: 3102: 3097: 3090: 3085: 3069: 3065: 3061: 3055: 3039: 3035: 3031: 3027: 3020: 3012: 3008: 3004: 2997: 2989: 2985: 2981: 2974: 2972: 2955: 2951: 2947: 2940: 2938: 2936: 2934: 2932: 2923: 2919: 2915: 2908: 2902:, p. 60. 2901: 2896: 2890:, p. 63. 2889: 2884: 2882: 2874: 2869: 2867: 2855:September 23, 2850: 2846: 2842: 2838: 2834: 2827: 2825: 2823: 2821: 2819: 2817: 2815: 2808:, p. 61. 2807: 2802: 2800: 2792: 2787: 2785: 2783: 2781: 2779: 2777: 2775: 2773: 2764: 2760: 2756: 2749: 2747: 2745: 2738:, p. 62. 2737: 2732: 2730: 2728: 2726: 2714:September 25, 2709: 2705: 2701: 2697: 2693: 2686: 2684: 2672:September 23, 2667: 2663: 2659: 2655: 2651: 2644: 2642: 2640: 2638: 2636: 2634: 2632: 2630: 2628: 2619: 2615: 2611: 2604: 2597: 2592: 2590: 2578:September 27, 2573: 2569: 2565: 2561: 2557: 2550: 2548: 2541:, p. 78. 2540: 2539:Morrison 1999 2535: 2533: 2531: 2529: 2522:, p. 79. 2521: 2520:Morrison 1999 2516: 2514: 2512: 2510: 2508: 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Woods 127:of New York 104: / 79:Coordinates 12581:Categories 12550:Tenderloin 12103:Cafe Rouge 11897:CafĂ© China 11797:Robb House 11727:461 5th Av 11722:425 5th Av 11607:Music Bldg 11537:Bush Tower 11527:The Bryant 11502:350 5th Av 11482:5 Times Sq 10263:1286216544 10244:(Report). 10092:1665846582 8903:1286158079 8887:Back Stage 8790:1286158079 8692:Back Stage 8622:Back Stage 8548:October 1, 8509:October 1, 8470:October 1, 8373:October 1, 8333:1445519202 8232:1438352463 8118:October 1, 7470:1438444052 7366:1325840251 7340:1014665133 7314:1476041465 7288:1014785728 7257:2338378743 7156:1283104921 7019:1285899443 6983:2297928054 6917:1284469087 6886:1256851037 6855:1243091655 6753:1032132714 6722:1248506377 6540:1114537540 6471:1114532418 6344:Opera News 6329:1221273082 6268:1291337111 6245:1505767801 6125:1114070490 5999:"The Play" 5753:"The Play" 5641:1113364604 5572:1528986282 5541:1130545593 5507:1031823687 5452:"The Play" 5237:1031778513 5203:1031769207 5124:1505527262 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3254:0362-4331 3175:0362-4331 3044:March 25, 2988:209650618 2922:227883027 2845:0362-4331 2763:211007920 2704:0362-4331 2662:0362-4331 2568:0362-4331 2451:0362-4331 2424:227783089 2398:219191443 2360:2692-1251 2322:235695132 2261:0042-2738 2220:0362-4331 2168:0042-2738 2071:0362-4331 1882:March 25, 1845:Citations 1397:Multiplex 1305:In 1989, 1112:Burlesque 1106:burlesque 1009:The Piker 987:Archibald 770:art films 727:burlesque 659:cartouche 592:multiplex 540:Manhattan 502:<7> 402:frontages 372:, in the 333:burlesque 304:multiplex 215:Architect 196:1998–2000 146:Multiplex 69:Manhattan 12468:Broadway 12344:stations 12272:Religion 11892:Ai Fiori 11567:The Epic 10365:70267065 10311:ProQuest 10259:ProQuest 10190:Archived 10186:Playbill 10168:Archived 10137:Archived 10133:Playbill 10115:Archived 10088:ProQuest 10027:Playbill 9982:Archived 9978:Playbill 9960:Archived 9929:Archived 9925:Playbill 9907:Archived 9876:Playbill 9850:Archived 9812:Archived 9782:Archived 9778:Deadline 9751:Archived 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