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to a corridor that entirely surrounded it; the corridor, in turn, led to the main entrance vestibule on 57th Street. The first and second tiers consist of sixty-five boxes; the first tier has 264 seats, eight per box, and the second tier has 238 seats, six to eight per box. As designed, the first tier of boxes was entirely open, while the second tier was partially enclosed, with open boxes on either end. The third tier above the parquet is the Dress Circle, seating 444 in six rows; the first two rows form an almost-complete semicircle. The fourth and the highest tier, the balcony, seats 837. Although seats with obstructed views exist throughout the auditorium, only the Dress Circle level has structural columns. An elliptic arch rises from the Dress Circle level; along with a corresponding arch at the rear of the auditorium, it supports the ceiling.
810:. There are four arched windows on the eastern portion of the sixth floor, as well as two arches on the west portion, which flank a blind arch. A frieze and cornice run above this floor. The seventh floor was originally a mansard roof. As part of an 1890s alteration, the mansard was replaced with a vertical wall resembling a continuous arcade. The seventh floor is topped by balustrades with decorated columns. The flat roof was converted into a roof garden with kitchen and service rooms. Carnegie Hall was also extended to the corner of Seventh Avenue and 56th Street, where a 13-story addition was designed in a similar style as the original building. The top of this addition contains a main dome, as well as smaller domes at its four corners.
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venue, designed by
Polshek Associates. The project was to cost $ 50 million; the high cost was attributed to the fact that the work would require excavations under the basement while concerts and other events were ongoing. In recognition of a $ 10 million grant from Arthur and Judy Zankel, the new space was renamed after the Zankels in January 1999; the auditorium proper was named after Judith Arron, who donated $ 5 million. Construction took place without disrupting performances or the nearby subway tunnel. Zankel Hall had been planned to open in early 2003, but the opening date was postponed due to the city's economic difficulties after the
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exact replacements. In April 1986, Carnegie officials announced their intent to sublease the vacant lot to
Rockrose Development for the construction of Carnegie Hall Tower. The following month, the hall closed completely for a seven-month renovation. The hall's plaster decorations were restored, although the carpeting and seats were replaced. That November, Carnegie Hall announced it would rename the recital hall after Joan and Sanford I. Weill, who not only were major donors to the renovation but also enlisted other donors to fund the project. The Weill family had donated $ 2.5 million, more than any other donor in the hall's history.
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dedicated elevator for the recital hall was also created. The
Carnegie Hall Corporation was also looking to develop a vacant lot immediately east of Carnegie Hall. The renovation was complicated by the fact that some parts of the original plans had been lost. A controversy also emerged when the Carnegie Hall Corporation started evicting longtime tenants of the upper-story studios, particularly those who refused to pay steeply increased rents. The first phase of the renovation was completed in September 1983 for $ 20 million. A second phase included upgrades to mechanical systems, such as air-conditioning and elevators.
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1198:, had been sold for redevelopment. In February 1925, Carnegie's widow sold the hall to a real estate developer, Robert E. Simon. The sale agreement included a clause requiring that either Carnegie Hall would continue to operate as a performance venue for at least the next five years, or another performance venue would be erected on the site. Simon said the hall would continue to operate for as long as it was profitable, and he wished to restore the basement recital hall as well.
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and the corporation faced fiscal deficits. By the mid-1970s, the venue suffered from burst pipes and falling sections of the ceiling, and there were large holes in the balconies that patrons could put their feet through. At the same time, operating costs had increased from $ 3.5 million in 1977 to $ 10.3 million in 1984, and the deficits had also risen accordingly. Carnegie Hall's equipment included a rundown air-conditioning system that did not work in the summer.
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plans for alterations in
December 1892. The plans called a tower of about 240 feet (73 m) at the corner of Seventh Avenue and 56th Street. In addition, the original building's mansard roof would become a flat roof, and the seventh story would be converted into a full story. The Philharmonic Society moved into the Music Hall in November 1892, drawing further crowds. The studios atop the building were constructed shortly afterward, from 1894 to 1896.
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944:, a former chairman of Carnegie Hall's board, as well as his wife Joan. This auditorium, in use since the hall opened in 1891, was originally called Chamber Music Hall and was placed in the "lateral building" east of the main hall. The space later became the Carnegie Chamber Music Hall, and the name was changed to Carnegie Recital Hall in the late 1940s. The venue was renamed after Joan and Sanford I. Weill in 1986, reopening in January 1987.
1130:. During the performance, Tuthill looked at the crowds on the auditorium's top tiers and reportedly left the hall to consult his drawings. He was uncertain that the supporting columns would withstand the weight of the crowd in attendance, but the dimensions turned out to be sufficient to support the weight of the crowd. Tchaikovsky considered the auditorium "unusually impressive and grand" when "illuminated and filled with an audience". The
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1296:. Carnegie Hall received a concert organ from the Netherlands in 1965, although the stage had to be renovated before the organ could be installed. The installation of the organ was delayed several times, as opponents feared that the changes would damage the hall's acoustics. Meanwhile, Carnegie Hall was profitable by the late 1960s, having consistently hosted about 350 shows a year during that decade.
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would evict all the remaining tenants of its upper-story studios so the corporation could convert the space into offices. By 2010, the last tenant had moved out. In 2014, Carnegie Hall opened its Judith and Burton
Resnick Education Wing. The new wing houses 24 music rooms, one of which is large enough to hold an orchestra or a chorus. The $ 230 million project was funded with gifts from
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and
Breines. The replacement tower would have had a red facade and would have been constructed on stilts, with art exhibits and other cultural facilities at the base. However, Glickman was unable to come up with the $ 22 million that the construction budget for the skyscraper called for. This, combined with delays in Lincoln Center's construction, prompted Glickman to decline an
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1194:, overhauling the Philharmonic Society's office, and removing staircases for about $ 70,000. By late 1924, the Carnegie Foundation was considering selling the hall to a private developer because of increasing financial deficits, which amounted to $ 15,000 a year. At the time, the site was valued at $ 2.5 million, and another performance venue in midtown,
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level contains 196 seats in fourteen rows, while the balcony level contains 72 seats in five rows. The modern-day recital hall contains off-white walls and blue seats. In the mid-20th century, the recital hall was decorated with red and gold, which was replaced in the 1980s with
Palladian arches similar to those in the hall's original design. A
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feet (46 m) along the street and 175 feet (53 m) along the avenue. The 16-story eastern wing contains the Weill
Recital Hall and is located along 57th Street. The 13-story southern wing, at Seventh Avenue and 56th Street, contains Zankel Hall. Except at the eighth floor, all three structures have floor levels at different heights.
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outfitted with lights. Originally, there were no stage wings; the backstage entrance from 56th Street led directly to a small landing just below the stage, while the dressing room was above the stage. During a 1980s renovation, a stage wing, orchestra room, and dressing rooms were added and the access to the stage was reconfigured.
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May 1892, the stockholders of the Music Hall
Company of New York discussed expanding the Music Hall into the site of a brewery at Seventh Avenue and 56th Street, which they had purchased about three months previously. The Music Hall Company also discussed enlarging the main auditorium's stage so it could accommodate operas.
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Room, respectively) were created the same year. Though the East and Club rooms were in
Carnegie Hall Tower, they were connected to the original Carnegie Hall. This represented the first new space added to Carnegie Hall since the studios were added in the late 1890s. At the parquet level, Cafe Carnegie was also renovated.
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main hall in 1988, but complaints continued for several years. Critics alleged there was concrete underneath the stage, but Carnegie Hall officials denied the allegations. Isaac Stern offered to disassemble the stage on the condition that the critics pay for the repairs if no concrete was found. Polshek Partners won the
1256:, who created a taskforce to save Carnegie Hall in early 1960, but Simon and his co-owners still filed eviction notices against some studio tenants. The same year, special legislation was passed allowing the city government to buy the site from Simon for $ 5 million, and Simon used the money to establish
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Other stories have been attributed to the folklore of Carnegie Hall. One such story concerns a performance on the unusually hot day of October 27, 1917, when Heifetz made his American debut in Carnegie Hall. After Heifetz had been playing for a while, fellow violinist Mischa Elman mopped his head and
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At the end of 2005, Carnegie Hall formed a partnership with the neighboring City Center. The agreement would have allowed the venues to host each other's dance, music, and theater programs; however, the partnership was canceled in early 2007. Carnegie Hall Corporation announced later in 2007 that it
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enlisted his friends Jacob M. and Alice Kaplan, as well as J. M. Kaplan Fund administrator Raymond S. Rubinow, for assistance in saving the hall. In 1959, two hundred residents of Carnegie Hall's studios were asked if they wanted to buy the building. Stern, the Kaplans, and Rubinow ultimately decided
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By September 1892, the Music Hall's stockholders planned to enlarge the hall to accommodate operatic performances, following a fire that severely damaged the Metropolitan Opera House. At the time, Morris Reno said the stage could not be modified until at least early 1893. The Music Hall Company filed
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and salmon-colored walls. Stores were added to the lobby in the 1940s. The storefronts, as well as a restaurant at the corner of 57th Street and Seventh Avenue, were removed in a 1980s renovation. Originally, there was a 150-seat dining room on the ground level below the Chamber Music Hall. Above the
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Due to the limited space available on the land lot, the construction of Zankel Hall required excavating 8,000 cubic feet (230 m) of additional basement space, at some points only 10 feet (3.0 m) under the Stern Auditorium's parquet level. The excavations descended up to 22 feet (6.7 m)
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The completely reconstructed Zankel Hall opened in September 2003. It is accessed from Seventh Avenue, where there is a marquee. Two escalators lead to the balcony and orchestra levels. The venue could be arranged with either a center stage, an end stage, or no stage. This is accomplished through the
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All but the top level can be reached by elevator; the top balcony is 137 steps above parquet level. The lowest level is the parquet level, which has twenty-five full rows of thirty-eight seats and four partial rows at stage level, for a total of 1,021 seats. The parquet was designed with eleven exits
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has been the chairman of Carnegie Hall's board since 2016. As of the fiscal year ending June 30, 2021, the Carnegie Hall Corporation had $ 718,141,781 in assets, which includes about $ 185 million in liabilities, $ 112 million in net assets without donor restrictions, and $ 421 million in net assets
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as "a luxury version of a black-box theater, the hall has the feel of a broadcasting studio, which it partly is". Though Zankel Hall's large capacity was highly publicized, it was only reconfigured once in its first two and a half years of operation. The Stern Auditorium's stage was renamed in March
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In June 2003, tentative plans were made for the Philharmonic to return to Carnegie Hall beginning in 2006, and for the orchestra to merge its business operations with those of the venue. However, the two groups abandoned these plans later that year. Zankel Hall opened in September 2003. Music critic
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During the late 1980s, Carnegie Hall had begun collecting items for the opening of a museum in the under-construction Carnegie Hall Tower. The Rose Museum was founded in April 1991, with its own entrance at 154 West 57th Street. The East Room and Club Room (later renamed Rohatyn Room and Shorin Club
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As part of the third phase of renovations, a recording studio called the Alice and Jacob M. Kaplan Space was built within the old chapter room on the fifth floor, directly above the main hall. The Kaplan Space opened in March 1985. The corporation announced in May 1985 that the main hall and recital
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Simon sold the entire stock of Carnegie Hall, Inc., the venue's legal owner, to a commercial developer, the Glickman Corporation, in July 1956 for $ 5 million. With the Philharmonic ready to move to Lincoln Center, the building was slated to be replaced by a 44-story skyscraper designed by Pomerance
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once it had been built (at the time, plans to build it were still at an early stage). Simon notified the Philharmonic that he would terminate the lease by 1959 if it did not purchase Carnegie Hall. In mid-1955, longtime employee John Totten organized a fundraising drive to prevent the demolition of
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The American Academy of Dramatic Arts moved into the basement recital hall in 1896, leasing the basement recital hall for the next fifty-four years. Also during the mid-1890s, the Music Hall was renamed Carnegie Hall for its main benefactor. According to Carnegie Hall archivist Gino Francesconi, the
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Zankel Hall, on the Seventh Avenue side of the building, is named after Judy and Arthur Zankel, who funded a renovation of the venue. Originally called simply Recital Hall, this was the first auditorium to open to the public in April 1891. It had a balcony, elevated side galleries, a beamed ceiling,
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Its entrance is through the Box Office Lobby on 57th Street near Seventh Avenue. When planned in 1889, this entrance was designed with a marble and mosaic vestibule measuring 25 feet (7.6 m) high and 70 feet (21 m) long. The entrance lobby is three stories high and had an organ loft at the
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frieze runs above the fourth floor, at the springing of the arches. To either side of the arcade, there are two tall round-arched windows on the second floor; those on the east flank a blind arch. There are pairs of pilasters on the fourth-floor mezzanine, above which is a string course. The Seventh
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of the arches. The center three arches lead directly to the Stern Auditorium's lobby, while the two outer arches lead to staircases to upper floors. On either side of the main entrance are smaller doorways (one on the west and two on the east), topped by blank panels at the mezzanine. There are five
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criticized its acoustics, saying: "The acoustics of this magnificent space are not the same." The Weill Recital Hall also received complaints about its acoustics, prompting Carnegie Hall officials to test out noise-absorbing panels in that space. Several noise-absorbing panels were installed in the
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Carnegie Hall became a more popular destination in the 1960s and 1970s, in part because of complaints over acoustics in the new Philharmonic Hall. The deficiencies with Carnegie Hall's facilities became more prominent after the latter's renovation. Carnegie Hall began to deteriorate due to neglect,
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resold tickets to the Music Hall's shows at greatly inflated prices, and ushers began selling off tickets to unoccupied seats at the start of each concert. For an inflated fee, the ushers allowed latecomers to sit down during the middle of a show, to the consternation of existing ticket holders. In
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By July 1889, Carnegie's company had acquired additional land, with frontage of 175 feet (53 m) on 57th Street. The architectural drawings were nearly completed and excavations for the music hall had been completed. The Henry Elias Brewery owned the corner of Seventh Avenue and 56th Street and
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In early March 1889, Morris Reno, director of the Oratorio and New York Symphony societies acquired nine lots on and around the southeast corner of Seventh Avenue and 57th Street. William Tuthill had been hired to design a "great music hall" on the site. The Music Hall, as it was called, would be a
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installed the soundproofing, which filters out noise from both the street and the subway. An elliptical concrete wall, measuring 12 inches (300 mm) wide, surrounds Zankel Hall and supports the Stern Auditorium. The elliptical enclosure measures 114 feet (35 m) long and 76 feet (23 m)
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Carnegie Hall is composed of three structures arranged in an "L" shape; each structure contains one of the hall's performance spaces. The original building, which houses the Isaac Stern Auditorium, is an eight-story rectangular building at the corner of Seventh Avenue and 57th Street, measuring 150
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It emerged in 1986 that Carnegie Hall had never consistently maintained an archive. Without a central repository, a significant portion of Carnegie Hall's documented history had been dispersed. In preparation for the celebration of Carnegie Hall's centennial in 1991, the management established the
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In the basement, the Carnegie Hall Cinema operated separately from the rest of Carnegie Hall until 1997, when the hall's management closed the cinema, along with two shops on Seventh Avenue. In late 1998, Carnegie Hall announced that it would turn the basement recital hall into another performance
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Above the Chamber Music Hall was a large chapter-room, a meeting room, a gymnasium, and twelve short-term "lodge rooms" in the roof. The 56th Street side of Carnegie Hall was designed with rooms for the choruses, soloists, and conductors, as well as offices and lodge rooms. On the roof of the 56th
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Carnegie Hall has 3,671 seats, divided among three auditoriums. The largest one is the Stern Auditorium, a five-story auditorium with 2,804 seats. Also part of the complex are the 599-seat Zankel Hall on Seventh Avenue, as well as the 268-seat Joan and Sanford I. Weill Recital Hall on 57th Street.
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In 1977, the Carnegie Hall Corporation decided to stop allowing new residents for its upper-story studios; existing residents were allowed to continue living there. The studios were instead offered mainly to commercial tenants, who could afford to pay higher rents. This prompted protests from the
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The Landmarks Preservation Commission approved the proposed renovation in July 1985. Renovation work began afterward. The project was complicated by the need to schedule construction around performances, the lack of a freight elevator, and the requirement that materials be replaced with close or
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lived in the studios. The spaces were designed for artistic work, with very high ceilings, skylights and large windows for natural light. Documents showed that Andrew Carnegie had always considered the spaces as a source of income to support the hall and its activities. After 1999, the space was
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The recital hall is served by its own lobby, which contains a pale color palette with red geometric metalwork. Prior to a 1980s renovation, it shared a lobby with the main auditorium. The Weill Recital Hall is the smallest of the three performance spaces, with a total of 268 seats. The orchestra
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The Ronald O. Perelman Stage is 42 feet (13 m) deep. It was originally designed with six tiers that could be raised and lowered hydraulically. The walls around the stage contain pilasters. The ceiling above the stage was designed as an ellipse, and the soffits of the ceiling were originally
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A minor renovation of Carnegie Hall's interior, as well as a steam-cleaning of the facade, took place in mid-1960. The basement recital hall became a movie theater called the Carnegie Playhouse. A screen was installed at the front of the former stage, while the balconies and side galleries were
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The first renovations started in February 1982 with the restoration and reconstruction of the recital hall and studio entrance. The lobby was lowered to street level, the box office was relocated behind the main auditorium, and two archways were added to the 57th Street facade. A new lobby and
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The city leased the hall to the Carnegie Hall Corporation, a nonprofit organization formed to run the venue. For 15 years, the Carnegie Hall Corporation paid the New York City government $ 183,600 in cash, Afterward, the corporation started paying the city through benefit concerts and outreach
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perpendicular to the stage; there are 54 seats in six boxes on the parterre level and 48 seats in four boxes on the mezzanine level. The boxes on the parterre level are raised above the level of the stage. Zankel Hall is wheelchair-accessible. Its stage is 44 feet (13 m) wide and 25 feet
1312:, to create a master plan for Carnegie Hall's renovation and expansion. Polshek found that Carnegie Hall's electrical systems, exits, fire alarms, and other systems were not up to modern building codes. The next year, the Carnegie Hall Corporation and the New York City government signed a
1215:. A hole was made in the stage's ceiling to allow the installation of ventilation and lights for the film. Canvas panels and curtains were placed over the hole, but the acoustics in the front rows became noticeably different. In 1947, Robert E. Simon Jr. renovated the hall to designs by
480:, it is one of the most prestigious venues in the world for both classical music and popular music. Carnegie Hall has its own artistic programming, development, and marketing departments and presents about 250 performances each season. It is also rented out to performing groups.
1348:, was planned for the lot immediately east of Carnegie Hall. Further upgrades, which required the main and recital halls' closure, included upgrades to both halls, the lobby, the facade, backstage areas, and offices. The lobby was lowered to street level and doubled in size.
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laid the cornerstone for the Music Hall on May 13, 1890. Andrew Carnegie said at the time that the venue was to not only be "a shrine of the goddess of music" but also a gathering hall. Isaac A. Hopper and Company was the contractor in charge of building the Music Hall. The
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Street section were janitors' apartments. Three elevators, two on the 57th Street side and one on the 56th Street side, originally served the building. The addition at the corner of 56th Street and Seventh Avenue was arranged with offices, studios, and private music rooms.
1893:, who were supposedly performing a Beethoven sonata when Kreisler lost track of what he was playing. After a few minutes of improvisation, Kreisler allegedly asked "For God's sake, Sergei, where am I?", to which Rachmaninoff was said to have responded, "In Carnegie Hall."
1050:, who served on the board of not only the Oratorio Society but also the New York Symphony. Carnegie was originally uninterested in funding a music hall in Manhattan, but he agreed to give $ 2 million after discussions with Damrosch. According to architectural writer
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division of the floor into nine sections, each 45 feet (14 m) wide with a separate lift underneath. There are 599 seats in Zankel Hall, spread across two levels. The parterre level seats a total of 463 and the mezzanine level seats 136. Each level has several
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The Recital Hall opened in March 1891 for recitals of the New York Oratorio Society. It was around this time that tickets for the official opening of the Music Hall were being sold. The oratorio hall in the basement opened on April 1, 1891, with a performance by
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praised the building's design as "harmonious, animated without restlessness, and quiet without dullness." In February 1891, Damrosch announced that he had created a subscription fund for a "permanent orchestra" that would perform mainly in the new Music Hall.
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below the original space's floor and came as close as 9 feet (2.7 m) to the adjacent subway tunnel. This also required the removal of twelve cast-iron columns holding up the Main Hall. In its place, a temporary framework of steel pipe columns, supporting
1400:, which had renovated the stage in 1986, alleged that the concrete was there before the renovation. The concrete was removed in mid-1995 while Carnegie Hall was closed for the summer; soon afterward, critics described a noticeable change in the acoustics.
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and cross-arches, and was painted white with gold decorations. At either end of the barrel vault were lunettes. The walls were painted salmon and had pairs of gray-marble pilasters supporting an entablature. The cross-arches had decorated cream-colored
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653:. The hub had been developed during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Its opening in 1891 directly contributed to the development of the hub. The area contains several buildings constructed as residences for artists and musicians, such as
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with lighting fixtures. The design also includes ticket windows on the south wall of the lobby. Past that, stairs on either side lead to the auditorium's parquet level; previously, stairs continued straight from the lobby to the parquet level.
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hall would be closed for several months. The corporation also started a fundraising drive to raise the $ 50 million needed to fund the renovation; more than half of the funding had already been raised at the time. A new structure designed by
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arch made of plywood, as well as a paneled wall behind the stage, were installed after the recital hall's completion but were removed in the 1980s to improve acoustics. The room has three chandeliers, which also amplify the room's acoustics.
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Carnegie Hall was designed from the outset with a facade of Roman brick. The facade was decorated with a large amount of Renaissance details. Most of the exterior walls are covered in reddish brown brick, though decorative elements such as
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Under Simon's ownership, a new organ was installed in Carnegie Hall and dedicated in December 1929. Robert Simon died in 1935. Murray Weisman succeeded Simon as president of Carnegie Hall's board of directors, while the late owner's son
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Cox, Meg (May 17, 1985). "Fabled Carnegie Hall, Often Close to Death, Will Receive Surgery: But the Challenge to Restorers Of New York Auditorium Is to Avoid Harming It Fabled Carnegie Hall in New York Will Soon Receive Major Surgery".
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said "The location for the music hall is perhaps rather far uptown, but it is easily accessible from the 'living' part of the city." The Music Hall Company was incorporated on March 27, 1889, with Carnegie, Damrosch, Reno, Tuthill, and
1316:, which would permit the development of the adjacent site to the east, a parking lot. In 1981, the federal government gave Carnegie Hall $ 1.8 million for the renovation; the city and Astor Foundation had previously given $ 450,000.
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The eighth floor of the main hall, which contained studios, was installed after the complex was completed. There were a total of 133 or 150 studios, many of which doubled as living quarters. Over the years, personalities such as
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To celebrate the 125th anniversary of the hall, during the 2015–2016 season, Carnegie Hall officials commissioned 125 new works, with "Fifty for the Future" coming from Kronos (25 by female composers and 25 by male composers).
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The sixth floor, at the center of the 57th Street facade, contains five square openings, each with a pair of round-arched windows. On either side of these five openings, there are round-arched windows, arranged as in a shallow
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renaming occurred "so that it shouldn't be confused by European artists with a vulgar music hall". During the early 20th century, Carnegie Hall accommodated many recitals and concerts because of its acoustic qualities.
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2896:"Addition to Music Hall; Work Planned That Will Make a Great Improvement. Better Exterior Appearance Promised and Much More Room – a Lofty Tower of Unique Design – Garden on the Roof – New Concert Room and Studios"
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Avenue facade is similar in design, but instead of window openings, there are blind openings filled with brick. Additionally, the arcade at the center of the Seventh Avenue facade has four arches instead of five.
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This joke has become part of the folklore of the hall, but its origins remain a mystery. Although described in 1961 as an "ancient wheeze", its earliest known appearances in print date from 1955. Attributions to
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and other donors, as well as $ 52.2 million from the city, $ 11 million from the state, and $ 56.5 million from bonds issued through the Trust for Cultural Resources of the City of New York. The
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praised Zankel Hall's flexibility, though he said "the builders did not quite succeed in insulating the auditorium from the sounds of passing trains". Architecturally, the space was described by critic
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Carnegie Hall Archives that year. The historical archival collections were renamed the Carnegie Hall Susan W. Rose Archives in 2021, after a longtime trustee and donor to the Archives and Rose Museum.
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performers have appeared at the hall every season. Some performers and bands had contracts that specified decibel limits for performances, an attempt to discourage rock performances at Carnegie Hall.
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5984:"Longer Life Won by Carnegie Hall; Glickman Drops Plan to Buy Building as the Site for Big Red Skyscraper Property Off Market Decision Is Due on Whether Philharmonic Will Stay Till New Home Is Ready"
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praised the auditorium's acoustical qualities, saying "each note was heard". The Music Hall had cost $ 1.25 million to construct and was the second major performance hall in New York City, after the
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A boiler room was placed under the sidewalk on Seventh Avenue. A small electric generation plant for 5,300 lamps was also planned. At the ground level of the main hall was a lobby with gray marble
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re-purposed for music education and corporate offices. In 2007, the Carnegie Hall Corporation announced plans to evict the 33 remaining studio residents, including celebrity portrait photographer
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to $ 300,000, but this was increased before the end of 1889 to $ 600,000, of which Carnegie held five-sixths. The cost of the building was then projected to be $ 1.1 million, including the land.
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in 1997 to recognize his efforts to save the hall from demolition in the 1960s. The main auditorium was originally planned to fit 3,300 guests, including two tiers of boxes, two balconies, and a
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The original section of the building is divided into three horizontal sections. The lowest section of the building comprises the first floor and the first-floor mezzanine, above which is a heavy
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is 200 feet (61 m) wide, covering the entire width of the block between 56th Street to the south and 57th Street to the north, and extends 150 feet (46 m) eastward from Seventh Avenue.
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on either side. The space was originally designed with dimensions of 90 by 96 feet (27 by 29 m). Following renovations made in 1896, it was renamed Carnegie Lyceum. It was leased to the
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of Adler & Sullivan, on the other hand, was an experienced designer of music halls and theaters; he served as the acoustical consultant. Carnegie Hall was constructed with heavy masonry
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2803:"It Stood the Test Well: the First Concert in the New Music Hall. Its Acoustic Properties Found to Be Adequate – a Russian Composer Warmly Greeted – Bishop Potter as a Lover of Music".
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860:. The lobby was originally several feet above street level, but it was lowered to street level in the 1980s. The rebuilt lobby contains geometric decorations evocative by the work of
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Carnegie Hall. Meanwhile, the Academy of Dramatic Arts had moved out of the basement recital hall in 1954. The Academy's former space was rented for the time being to other tenants.
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and removable seats. The space was an oratorio hall capable of accommodating over 1,000 people, and it could double as a banquet hall. There was a full kitchen service, as well as a
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Rumor is that a pedestrian on Fifty-seventh Street, Manhattan, stopped Jascha Heifetz and inquired, "Could you tell me how to get to Carnegie Hall?" "Yes," said Heifetz. "Practice!"
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with donor restrictions. During that year, the Carnegie Hall Corporation's total operating revenue was about $ 74 million, while total expenses and losses were about $ 62 million.
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convinced Carnegie officials that allowing a Beatles concert at the venue "would further international understanding" between the United States and Great Britain. Two concerts by
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1563:. In late 1950, the NBC Symphony Orchestra's weekly broadcast concerts were moved there, remaining until the orchestra disbanded following Toscanini's retirement in April 1954.
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1367:, and the New York Philharmonic. The Kaplan Rehearsal Space was also created in 1986, and the Weill Recital Hall opened in January 1987. A month after the main hall reopened,
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754:. As originally designed, the terracotta and brick were both brown, and the pitched roof was made of corrugated black tile, but this was later replaced with the eighth floor.
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Soble, Ronald L. (May 13, 1989). "Carnegie Hall Seeks Mementos as 100th Birthday Approaches Musical, Cultural and Political History Taking Shape at Venerable N.Y. Site".
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with five large arches, originally separated by granite pilasters. An entablature, with the words "Music Hall Founded by Andrew Carnegie", runs across the loggia at the
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originally would not sell the land, as its proprietor believed the site had a good water source. Plans for the Music Hall were filed in November 1889. Carnegie's wife
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1459:. Carnegie Hall returned to hosting a full schedule of programming during the 2022–2023 season. A new cafe at Carnegie Hall, the Weill Cafe, opened in January 2024.
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five-story brick and limestone building, containing a 3,000-seat main hall with and several smaller rooms for rehearsals, lectures, concerts, and art exhibitions.
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Meanwhile, soon after the sale, Simon started planning how to preserve the hall, and approached some of its resident artists-in-residence for help. Violinist
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4533:"Some Fine New Buildings; Grand Edifices Now Going Up in This City. The Carnegie Music Hall, Century, Republican, and Athletic Club Houses, and Lenox Lyceum"
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were staging or performing their own music at Carnegie Hall. In its early years, Carnegie Hall hosted the New York Philharmonic and Symphony, as well as the
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The stage of the main hall had begun to warp by the early 1990s, and officials disassembled the stage in 1995, where they discovered a slab of concrete.
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On the third and fourth floors, above the main entrance, is a two-and-a-half story arcade on 57th Street with five round-headed arches. A balcony with a
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5319:"Carnegie Hall Sold, but Wins 5 Years' Grace: R. E. Simon Buys Historic Music Center, Agreeing to Time Clause Unless New Auditorium Is Built Sooner".
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wide. The walls are sloped at a 7-degree angle and contain sycamore paneling. The lighting and sound equipment is mounted from twenty-one trusses.
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bar above the third floor; two third-floor windows separated by a Corinthian column; and two fourth-floor windows separated by a pilaster. A broad
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5266:"Carnegie Hall To Be Razed for Office Building: Famous Structure Will Be Put on Market Soon as Result of Its Deficits; Price Around $ 2,500,000".
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2757:"The New Music Hall Plans: a Fine Building to Be Erected It Will Be Ready for the World's Fair—architectural Features and Interior Arrangements".
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pursued his father's vision for a new music hall. While studying music in Germany in 1887, the younger Damrosch was introduced to the businessman
1042:. The Oratorio Society had been looking for a permanent performance venue ever since it was founded in 1873. Though Leopold died in 1885, his son
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The Stern Auditorium is six stories high with 2,804 seats on five levels. Originally known as the main auditorium, it was renamed after violinist
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1586:'s Clef Club Orchestra performed a "proto-jazz" concert there. Many jazz performers have also given performances at Carnegie Hall, including
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appeared in a variety benefit concert on May 6, 1955. Rock acts were not regularly booked at the Hall however, until February 12, 1964, when
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4600:"A Great Home of Music: Mrs. Carnegie Lays the Cornerstone of the Building Addresses by Morris Reno, E. Francis Hyde and Andrew Carnegie".
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773:. The main entrance of Carnegie Hall is placed in what was originally the center of the primary facade on 57th Street. It consists of an
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The City That Never Was : Two Hundred Years of Fantastic and Fascinating Plans That Might Have Changed the Face of New York City
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5343:"Carnegie Hall Is About to Be Sold, but Won't Close Yet; Clause in Sale Contract Safeguards Concerts There for the Next Five Years"
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5848:"Music Landmark Brings 5 Million; Buyer of Carnegie Hall Offers to Resell to Orchestra but May Tear It Down Society Hopes to Move"
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Molleson, John (June 17, 1959). "Bids Residents Buy Carnegie Hall: Studio Tenant Urges 200 to Gel Together to Avert Demolition".
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2250:"Streetscapes /57th Street Between Avenue of the Americas and Seventh Avenue; High and Low Notes of a Block With a Musical Bent"
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8792:"From Opera, Minstrelsy and Ragtime to Social Justice: An Overview of African American Performers at Carnegie Hall, 1892–1943"
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in 1962. The landmark status was certified in 1964, and a National Historic Landmark plaque was placed on the building. The
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9584:"Large Crowd Sees Law School Rites; Ex-Justice Putnam Addresses 279 Graduates of New York Institution in Carnegie Hall"
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2518:"Plans for a Big Building Filed: the Music Hall Company Getting Ready to Begin Work—expectations of the Stockholders".
2388:"'Round 57th Street: New York's First Gallery District Continues (for Now) to Weather Endless Changes in the Art World"
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5882:"Red Tower Is Set for Carnegie Site; a Forty-four-story Office Building Is to Be Built Where Carnegie Hall Now Stands"
5421:"A New Organ To Be Installed In Carnegie Hall: Preliminary Work for Placing the Instrument Will Be Started Tomorrow".
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2865:"For a Bigger Music Hall: Elaborate Plans of Reconstruction There Will Be High Tower and Other Changes Will Be Made".
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By the 1950s, changes in the music business prompted Simon to sell the hall. In April 1955, Simon negotiated with the
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8739:"Toscanini Quits Symphony, May Close 68-Year Career; Announcement at the End of His Sunday Concert Comes as Surprise"
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1983:
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became the first African-American to sing at Carnegie Hall on June 15, 1892, less than a year after the hall opened.
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661:, the Osborne, and the Rodin Studios. In addition, the area contained the headquarters of organizations such as the
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5578:"R. E. Simon Lauded at Bust Unveiling; Tributes Paid to His Idealism in Preserving Carnegie Hall for Community Use"
5502:"Weisman Is Head of Carnegie Hall; Elected President to Succeed Late Robert E. Simon, Whose Son Is Made an Officer"
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Molleson, John (March 31, 1960). "Mayor Aids Plan to Save Carnegie Hall: Pledges 'Fast Work' To Back Committee".
5817:"Drive Set to Bar Sale of Carnegie; Hall's Superintendent Seeks Aid of Public to Prevent Destruction of Building"
5290:"New Leader Rises in City Real Estate; Carnegie Hall Deal Discloses Robert E. Simon as a Manipulator of Millions"
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in 1896, then converted into the Carnegie Hall Cinema in May 1961. The venue became a performance space in 1997.
8899:"Ellington's Fans Applaud Concert; Duke Introduces 'New World A-coming' Before Capacity Throng at Carnegie Hall"
8682:"Toscanini to Lead N.B.C. Broadcasts; First of New Symphony Series Starting on Jan. 27 Will Be a Verdi Memorial"
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5787:"World of Music: Philharmonic Problem; Termination of the Carnegie Lease May Force Orchestra to Vacate in 1959"
5241:"Musical Centre is Likely to Shift; Approaching Sale of Carnegie Hall Will Compel Building in Another District"
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5373:"Carnegie Hall Sale is Now Complete; But R.E. Simon Says Buildings Will Stand Indefinitely if Income Warrants"
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1992:, with the stress on the second syllable, the building is pronounced with the stress on the first syllable of
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9610:"Juilliard School to Give 73 Diplomas; Music Institution Will Hold Its Commencement Tonight in Carnegie Hall"
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While the Elman/Godowsky anecdote was confirmed to be true, other accounts about Carnegie Hall may have been
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6334:"Old Water Tower Now a Landmark; City Commission Designates Pillar on Harlem River and 10 Other Structures"
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that the best move would be for the city government to become involved. The move gained support from mayor
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top, which was converted into a lounge area by the mid-20th century. The lobby ceiling was designed as a
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Carnegie Hall, originally the Music Hall, was constructed between 1889 and 1891 as a venue shared by the
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6117:"Evictions Fought at Carnegie Hall; Landlord Presses Cases Despite City Plan to Save Famous Music House"
5212:"Change in Carnegie Hall; Substantial Steps to Provide New York's Temple of Music with a New Stoop Line"
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The main hall (including the Stern Auditorium) was reopened on December 15, 1986, with a gala featuring
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4917:"Carnegie Hall, at 90, Is Thinking Young; Music View Carnegie Hall, Approaching 90, Is Thinking Young"
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Carnegie Hall is part of a former artistic hub around a two-block section of West 57th Street between
495:. The hall was owned by the Carnegie family until 1925, after which Robert E. Simon and then his son,
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8322:"Carnegie Hall Makes Room for Future Stars: Resnick Education Wing Prepares to Open at Carnegie Hall"
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The main entrance has five arches at the first floor and its mezzanine, with another arcade above it.
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3354:"Carnegie Hall Grows the Only Way It Can; Burrowing Into Bedrock, Crews Carve Out a New Auditorium"
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performed a benefit concert at Carnegie Hall in November 1970, which was recorded and subsequently
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9416:"Ballet: Yugoslav Folk Art 'Tanec' Dancers Appear at Carnegie Hall in Display of Tremendous Skill"
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8873:"Fats Waller Heard in Carnegie Recital; 2,600 Attend Event Given by Pianist, Composer and Leader"
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8924:"Music: Intellectual Jazz; Modern Quartet Stars in Two Concerts Here by the Norman Granz Troupe"
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similar doorways on Seventh Avenue. The original backstage entrance is on 161 West 56th Street.
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9832:"Carnegie Hall's Historical Archival Collections Named as Carnegie Hall Susan W. Rose Archives"
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9558:"City College Holds Its Commencement; Largest Class in Its History Graduated at Carnegie Hall"
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5531:"M. Murray Weisman Carnegie Hall President: Managing Director Succeeds Late Robert E. Simon".
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Jr. became the vice president. A bust of the senior Simon was installed in the lobby in 1936.
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Opening Carnegie Hall: The Creation and First Performances of America's Premier Concert Stage
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Carnegie Hall was desegregated from its opening, in contrast to other music venues like the
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Jr., became owner. Carnegie Hall was proposed for demolition in the 1950s in advance of the
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9498:"Choate and Twain Plead for Tuskegee; Brilliant Audience Cheers Them and Booker Washington"
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8012:"Music Review: Opening Weekend at Zankel Hall; Trash Cans on the Stage, a Subway Underfoot"
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New York 1960: Architecture and Urbanism Between the Second World War and the Bicentennial
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Goldberger, Paul (September 8, 1983). "Architecture: Carnegie Hall Restoration, Phase 1".
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1847:. Carnegie Hall archivist Gino Francesconi favors a version told by the wife of violinist
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9280:"This installment of our A to Z of Carnegie Hall series looks at the letter R—for 'Rock'"
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of the Philadelphia Symphonic Orchestra regularly performed at the hall for six decades.
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6459:"A $ 125,000 Organ Given to Carnegie; Installation Requires Major Alterations to Stage"
6013:"Plan to Raze Old Carnegie Hall Is Off: Realtor Drops Option on Landmark in New York".
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ceiling. The Rose Museum space is separated from two adjacent rooms by sliding panels.
599:
579:
7711:"Commercial Property: Carnegie Hall; What's Playing? Maybe a Rousing Business Meeting"
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2017:
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8818:
8509:"Carnegie Hall reopened Wednesday night for 1st live concert since start of pandemic"
8007:
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5133:"No Grand Opera This Season.; the Carnegie Music Hall Stage Cannot Be Rebuilt for It"
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New York 2000: Architecture and Urbanism Between the Bicentennial and the Millennium
8107:
3471:
1924:
National Register of Historic Places listings in Manhattan from 14th to 59th Streets
1865:, the joke "shows how firmly the building has lodged itself in American folklore".
1002:
The building also contains the Carnegie Hall Archives, established in 1986, and the
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9472:
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7874:
6249:"National Register of Historic Places Inventory: Carnegie Hall—Accompanying Photos"
6060:"New Unit Formed to Save Carnegie; Society Would Lease Hall if City Can Acquire It"
5053:"Changes at the Music Hall: Plans Which May Change the Place Into an Opera House".
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1954:
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dining room, but below the venue itself, were parlors, cloak rooms, and restrooms.
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5701:"Orchestra to Bid on Carnegie Hall; Philharmonic May Lose Old Home Unless It Buys"
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are mistaken; it is uncertain if he ever used the joke. Alternatives to violinist
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1948:
1919:
List of New York City Designated Landmarks in Manhattan from 14th to 59th Streets
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5077:"A Home for Grand Opera; Plans for Transforming Music Hall Into an Opera House"
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performed a concert on January 27, 1956, becoming the first dance company from
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sealed. The Carnegie Hall Cinema opened in May 1961 with a showing of the film
1232:
992:
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836:
504:
10814:
5449:; Stoessel Leads Chorus of 250 Voices Augmented by New Organ of Carnegie Hall"
4654:"Isaac A. Hopper's Record; Some Notable Achievements in His Line as a Builder"
1341:
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4815:"To Open the New Music Hall: the Amended Programme—many Eminent Performers".
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309:
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9528:"Nation's Orators Glorify Schurz; Carnegie Hall Memorial a People's Tribute"
8950:"Louis Armstrong Heard; Trumpeter Presents Program of Jazz at Carnegie Hall"
5943:
5764:
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3620:
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had his major conducting debut when he had to substitute for a suddenly ill
876:
484:
Besides the auditoriums, Carnegie Hall contains offices on its top stories.
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4382:"A New Music Hall; Carnegie Takes Hold of the Project and a Site Is Bought"
4211:
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1682:
1677:
performed two shows during their first trip to the United States. Promoter
1639:
1599:
1556:
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1118:. The Music Hall officially opened on May 5, 1891, with a rendition of the
1115:
844:
678:
646:
536:
13336:
828:
543:, New York City. The site covers 27,618 square feet (2,565.8 m). Its
14439:
Event venues on the National Register of Historic Places in New York City
13750:
13436:
12937:
12764:
12588:
12477:
11819:
11734:
11296:
11236:
11089:
10680:
10639:
10462:
9920:
8196:"As Merger with Carnegie Crumbles, City Center Will Delay Its Renovation"
7302:"History of the Hall: Timeline – 1986 Full interior renovation completed"
6590:
2480:"Carnegie Music Hall; the Work of Construction Is Expected to Begin Soon"
2157:
New York City Department of Information Technology and Telecommunications
1674:
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1623:
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1356:
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1003:
824:
735:
689:
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571:
10497:
1778:
As of 2021, the Executive and Artistic Director of Carnegie Hall is Sir
1304:
existing tenants. In 1979, the board of Carnegie Hall Corporation hired
1153:
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12864:
12849:
12809:
11779:
11744:
11301:
10768:
10452:
6112:
4181:"Elizabeth Sargent, 96, Poet and Last Tenant Above Carnegie Hall, Dies"
1820:
1755:
1548:
1440:
949:
798:
786:
673:. By the 21st century, the artistic hub had largely been replaced with
666:
551:
1328:
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Carnegie Hall officials renovated the building in 1920, replacing its
1092:
as trustees. Originally, the Music Hall Company intended to limit its
12984:
12172:
12101:
11809:
11689:
10854:
10758:
10743:
10065:"Critic's Notebook; Repertory of Legends Immortalizes Jascha Heifetz"
6595:"Carnegie Hall and City Negotiating on Renovation and Air-Rights Use"
2212:
1882:
1627:
1119:
770:
603:
83:
2638:. Vol. 46, no. 1189. December 27, 1890. pp. 867–868.
1272:
also designated Carnegie Hall as a city landmark in September 1967.
1209:
The main hall was modified around 1946 during filming for the movie
1182:
999:. The last resident, poet Elizabeth Sargent, moved out during 2010.
12942:
12664:
12482:
11291:
10649:
10567:
10340:, Carnegie Hall performance opportunity for elite student musicians
9798:. American Popular Music. Facts On File, Incorporated. p. 45.
8823:
8712:
7396:"Critic's Notebook; Setting the Right Tone for 'new' Carnegie Hall"
6148:"Robert E. Simon Jr., Who Created a Town, Reston, Va., Dies at 101"
4628:
Architecture and Building: A Journal of Investment and Construction
962:
924:
739:
544:
8382:"4 NYC buildings are among AIA's best projects by U.S. architects"
8286:"In Apartments Above Carnegie Hall, a Coda for Longtime Residents"
2018:"National Register Information System – (#66000535)"
1528:
The hall also hosted recitals by solo performers such as pianists
1455:. The hall reopened on October 6, 2021, with a performance by the
1126:, and a concert conducted by Walter Damrosch and Russian composer
831:
seating 1,200. The main hall accommodated the performances of the
14489:
Theatres on the National Register of Historic Places in Manhattan
12659:
10482:
7813:
7746:
7587:
7116:
6957:
6902:
6733:
4452:. Vol. 43, no. 1097. March 23, 1889. pp. 392–393.
1836:
1828:
1709:
performed a concert April 1, 1971, which resulted in their album
1408:
in 2001. The excavations also raised the budget to $ 69 million.
766:
13811:
13135:
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis High School for International Careers
10337:
10320:
10240:. Photographs by Christopher Little. New York: Abbeville Press.
9866:
The Life of the Party: A New Collection of Stories and Anecdotes
8777:
Sissierettta Jones, "The Greatest Singer of Her Race," 1868–1933
6368:"Carnegie Hall Getting New Paint and Upholstery for Fall Season"
222:
10467:
8508:
6224:"National Register of Historic Places Inventory: Carnegie Hall"
1852:
1019:
1011:
1007:
920:
852:
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807:
793:
in front of this arcade. Each arch has a horizontal terracotta
610:
to the southeast. Right outside the hall is an entrance to the
14356:
4694:
The Real Estate Record: Real Estate Record and Builders' Guide
4450:
The Real Estate Record: Real Estate Record and Builders' Guide
3546:"Architecture Review; Zankel Hall, Carnegie's Buried Treasure"
3012:
The Real Estate Record: Real Estate Record and Builders' Guide
2681:(4th ed.). New York: John Wiley & Sons. p. 126.
2636:
The Real Estate Record: Real Estate Record and Builders' Guide
1685:
were performed on October 17, 1969. Since then numerous rock,
818:
14474:
New York State Register of Historic Places in New York County
14444:
Italian Renaissance Revival architecture in the United States
11231:
10949:
5741:
Stern, Robert A. M.; Mellins, Thomas; Fishman, David (1995).
2542:"1891 Andrew Carnegie's new Music Hall opens – Carnegie Hall"
2433:
Stern, Robert A. M.; Mellins, Thomas; Fishman, David (1999).
1832:
1727:
1686:
595:
9006:"Nina Simone Draws Full House To Carnegie Hall Song Session"
8479:"Carnegie Hall reopens to music inspired by 7 p.m. cheering"
6563:"City Studies Artists' Protests Over Rents at Carnegie Hall"
3014:. Vol. 44, no. 1114. July 20, 1889. p. 1017.
2314:
1960:
1066:. The area around 57th Street was still mostly residential.
677:, a series of luxury skyscrapers around the southern end of
428:
10609:
10190:
Stern, Robert A. M.; Fishman, David; Tilove, Jacob (2006).
9990:
Meet Me at Jim & Andy's: Jazz Musicians and Their World
9724:
9446:"Carnegie Hall to Mark 125th Anniversary in 2015-16 Season"
9312:
A Passion Play: The Story Of Ian Anderson & Jethro Tull
9250:"Led Zeppelin Timeline – October 17, 1969, New York, NY US"
8968:
7978:"A Three-Ring House of Music, Willing and Able to Surprise"
7906:
7904:
5001:"Extra! Read All About It – Carnegie's $ 1.25 Million Hall"
4696:. Vol. 55, no. 1399. January 5, 1895. p. 7.
4417:"To Build a Music Hall: Plans for a Magnificent Building".
3954:
3952:
1975:
1969:
1746:
The hall has also been the site of lectures, including the
1726:
European folk dance music first came to Carnegie Hall when
1690:
1582:
The hall was used for popular music as early as 1912, when
899:
743:
440:
7650:"Music Notes; Composers Orchestra Defies the Conventional"
4948:
Tchaikovsky in America : the composer's visit in 1891
2435:
New York 1880: Architecture and Urbanism in the Gilded Age
2351:"Society House of the American Society of Civil Engineers"
2336:(Reprinted by Scholarly Press, 1976; often referred to as
2051:. National Park Service. September 9, 2007. Archived from
1909:
List of museums and cultural institutions in New York City
1451:
Carnegie Hall closed temporarily in March 2020 due to the
940:
The Joan and Sanford I. Weill Recital Hall is named after
9697:"At Carnegie Hall, a New Leader With a Son Named Hendrix"
9091:. Oxford Studies in Recorded Jazz. OUP USA. p. 168.
8589:"You Don't Need a Ticket for Weill Café at Carnegie Hall"
8448:"Carnegie Hall reopens in October after 19-month closure"
8413:"Bruised by the Pandemic, Carnegie Hall Plans a Comeback"
6508:
4277:"Death of Dr. Damrosch.; Fatal Result of a Brief Illness"
1972:
1560:
1014:
paneling with brass edges, as well as columns with brass
437:
434:
11866:
St. Nicholas Collegiate Reformed Protestant Dutch Church
8539:"Carnegie Hall plans return to full schedule in 2022–23"
7901:
6926:"Carnegie Hall Opens Studio for Rehearsal and Recording"
3949:
1575:, which remained segregated well into the 20th century.
9719:
9717:
8141:"Carnegie Hall, City Center forge artistic partnership"
3135:. Vol. 48, no. 7. March 1986. pp. 3–11.
2677:; Postal, Matthew A. (2009). Postal, Matthew A. (ed.).
2148:
9088:
Benny Goodman's Famous 1938 Carnegie Hall Jazz Concert
8810:
6529:"Carnegie Hall to End Its Live-In Studios for Artists"
5398:"Carnegie Hall Has Passed from Iron Master's Estate".
5235:
5233:
4838:
4836:
4834:
3715:"A New Underground at Carnegie, in More Ways Than One"
3693:
3691:
3689:
3687:
3685:
3683:
3211:
3209:
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3205:
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3201:
3199:
3197:
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1786:. Gillinson started serving in that position in 2005.
1439:
and the Weill Family Fund, Judith and Burton Resnick,
1380:' Honor Award in 1988 for its renovation of the hall.
14345:
12549:
DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Metropolitan New York City
10152:
9370:
9346:
Tumult!: The Incredible Life and Music of Tina Turner
6687:"A Superb Scheme for the Renovation of Carnegie Hall"
4950:. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 83–84.
4007:
2708:
1984:
1966:
1957:
1669:
Rock and roll music first came to Carnegie Hall when
449:
431:
425:
10373:
9714:
9473:"The Kronos Quartet Celebrates Its 50th Anniversary"
9336:
7459:"Critic's Notebook; Seeking a Consensus on Carnegie"
3434:"In the Offing, Another Hall In Carnegie's Basement"
1914:
List of National Historic Landmarks in New York City
1448:
gave an architectural award to the project in 2017.
464:, occupying the east side of Seventh Avenue between
13785:
History of the National Register of Historic Places
9284:
The A to Z of Carnegie Hall: R is for Rock 'n' Roll
7527:"Carnegie Hall Marks a Milestone for a Cornerstone"
6762:"Carnegie Hall and Tenants Wrangle Over Rent Rises"
6271:"Carnegie Hall Designated as a 'National Landmark'"
5740:
5230:
5164:"Carnegie Hall Marks a Milestone for a Cornerstone"
4831:
4630:. Vol. 12. W. T. Comstock. 1890. p. 234.
4055:"Carnegie Hall and Tenants Wrangle Over Rent Rises"
3680:
3190:
2977:. Carnegie Hall. September 23, 2013. Archived from
2432:
1963:
1658:on January 16, 1938, with guest performers such as
422:
10233:
10191:
10189:
9729:"Audited Financial Statement for Fiscal Year 2021"
9383:. Exploring Musical Genres. ABC-CLIO. p. 69.
8043:"At Eclectic Zankel Hall, One Thing Rarely Varies"
7879:"Carnegie Hall Expanding, Using Underground Space"
6656:"U.S. Gives $ 1.8 Million For Carnegie Renovation"
6514:
6481:
6479:
5742:
5554:"Robert E. Simon Bust Unveiled In Carnegie Hall".
5206:
5204:
5191:
5189:
4842:
3958:
3697:
3465:
3463:
3461:
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3230:"Architecture: Carnegie Hall Restoration, Phase 1"
3215:
835:from 1892 to 1962, when the Philharmonic moved to
9636:"Carnegie Hall Names Executive/Artistic Director"
9380:Listen to Classic Rock! Exploring a Musical Genre
9302:
8442:
8440:
7430:"New Season for Carnegie and New Sound for Weill"
5749:. New York: Monacelli Press. pp. 1112–1113.
5478:"Robert E. Simon Dies at 58; Kin of Morgenthau".
4247:
4245:
4243:
4086:"Notes of Protest Sound in Aria of Carnegie Hall"
3851:
3849:
3847:
3845:
3843:
3585:"A New Stage and Lineup for Concerts at Carnegie"
3120:
3118:
1878:, in the next seat, replied, "Not for pianists."
1431:, who had donated $ 20 million to Carnegie Hall.
1030:The idea for what is now Carnegie Hall came from
14405:
13565:
9868:. Garden City, New York: Doubleday. p. 335.
9162:It All Happened – A Living History of Live Music
8561:
8355:"Carnegie Hall Studio Towers Renovation Project"
3969:
3967:
2213:"MTA Neighborhood Maps: 57 St 7 Av (N)(Q)(R)(W)"
1143:
14469:New York City Designated Landmarks in Manhattan
10844:
10055:
10053:
10051:
9959:"The Origins of That Famous Carnegie Hall Joke"
9881:
9879:
9877:
9875:
9695:Cooper, Michael; Gelles, David (June 2, 2016).
9438:
8315:
8313:
8311:
8187:
8161:
7486:
7484:
7418:
6830:"Carnegie Hall to Close for 7 Months Next Year"
6820:
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2671:New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission
2584:New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission
2358:New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission
2287:New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission
1275:
1270:New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission
513:New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission
10017:
10015:
10013:
10011:
10009:
9952:
9950:
8644:"At 67, Bernstein Comes Home to Carnegie Hall"
8437:
8373:
7845:"Assessing Carnegie Hall Without the Concrete"
7809:"Carnegie Hall Hopes New Floor Is a Sound One"
7176:"They shutter to think of the future for hall"
7081:"Carnegie Hall Details Plans for Office Tower"
6891:
6889:
6859:
6857:
6855:
6793:"Tenants: Carnegie Hall is giving us the hook"
6193:"Carnegie Hall Begins $ 20 Million Renovation"
5605:
5603:
4989:
4762:. New York City. February 6, 1891. p. 1.
4732:. New York City. February 6, 1891. p. 4.
4440:
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3067:"Philharmonic Cheered In Carnegie Hall Finale"
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507:in 1962. Though Carnegie Hall is designated a
476:and built by industrialist and philanthropist
13736:
13551:
10830:
10359:
9915:
9913:
9228:. New York: Fine Communications. p. 14.
7019:"Landmarks Panel Backs Carnegie Hall Project"
6722:
6720:
6425:"Italian Film Opens New Carnegie Hall Cinema"
5953:. Vol. 107. September 1957. p. 43.
4342:
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2975:"The A to Z of Carnegie Hall: S is for Stern"
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1885:in nature. One such story involved violinist
1748:Tuskegee Institute Silver Anniversary Lecture
1483:Symphony No. 9, opus 95, "From the New World"
12640:
10333:Carnegie Hall and its events on NYC-ARTS.org
10112:
10048:
9872:
9694:
9464:
8794:. The Black Past: Remembered and Reclaimed.
8615:"All of Toscanini's Recordings to be Issued"
8308:
7912:"Carnegie Delays Opening of Additional Hall"
7680:"Rent the Shorin Club Room and Rohatyn Room"
7481:
7241:"Rejuvenated Carnegie Is Again Premier Hall"
6815:
6626:"Mull sale of air rights over Carnegie Hall"
6551:
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14335:National Register of Historic Places Portal
10006:
9947:
9925:"'How do you get to Carnegie Hall?' (joke)"
9410:
8816:
8756:
8705:
8531:
8470:
8349:
8347:
8132:
7778:"Case of the Carnegie Concrete, Chapter II"
7549:
6886:
6852:
5620:. Vol. 129, no. 7. Archived from
5600:
5099:
4435:
4367:
4299:
4003:
4001:
3999:
3997:
3801:
3568:
3536:
3534:
3503:
3501:
3499:
3497:
3495:
3493:
3407:
3333:
2993:
2881:
2819:
2704:
2702:
2700:
2698:
2605:
2459:
2143:
2141:
1547:, frequently recorded in the Main Hall for
819:Main Hall (Stern Auditorium/Perelman Stage)
14320:
13743:
13729:
13558:
13544:
10837:
10823:
10366:
10352:
10328:Carnegie Hall at Google Cultural Institute
10294:Carnegie Hall, the First One Hundred Years
10291:Schickel, Richard; Walsh, Michael (1987).
9910:
8570:"Carnegie Hall Is Adding a New Restaurant"
8357:. American Institute of Architects. 2017.
7873:
7739:
7613:
7328:"Weill Recital Hall to Open With Festival"
7078:
6717:
6684:
6146:McFadden, Robert D. (September 21, 2015).
5736:
5734:
5732:
5730:
5728:
5726:
5643:. Beverly Willis Architecture Foundation.
5018:
4577:. New York City. May 14, 1890. p. 7.
4335:
4072:
4013:
3932:
3919:
3883:
3618:
3607:
3509:"At Carnegie Hall, music goes underground"
3428:
3308:
3306:
3304:
3302:
3278:
3227:
3034:
2952:
2853:
2733:
2665:
2663:
2661:
2508:
2428:
2049:National Historic Landmark summary listing
1477:
1462:
1069:
752:New York Architectural Terra-Cotta Company
684:
264:New York State Register of Historic Places
54:
13752:U.S. National Register of Historic Places
13077:Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Sculpture Garden
12740:Grand Central Oyster Bar & Restaurant
10154:Historic Structures Report: Carnegie Hall
10059:
9752:
9376:
9223:
8586:
8410:
8170:"Two Halls Will Share Theaters and Funds"
8006:
7839:
7583:"History From the Pockets of Tchiakovsky"
7496:"A Phantom Exposed: Concrete at Carnegie"
6585:
6583:
6491:"At Carnegie Hall: 'No Serious Problems'"
6221:
5978:
5641:Pioneering Women of American Architecture
4995:
4911:
4352:
3315:"Stern Auditorium-Perelman Stage Rentals"
2773:
2714:
2564:
2426:
2424:
2422:
2420:
2418:
2416:
2414:
2412:
2410:
2408:
2187:New York City Department of City Planning
1905:, advocacy organization for Carnegie Hall
1794:
1473:Category:Albums recorded at Carnegie Hall
1264:programs. Carnegie Hall was designated a
1244:to buy the building itself in July 1958.
246:U.S. National Register of Historic Places
14464:National Historic Landmarks in Manhattan
10228:
10021:
9342:
8587:Fabricant, Florence (January 16, 2024).
8379:
8344:
8255:"Carnegie Artist Tenants Fight Eviction"
7942:"N.Y. Philharmonic, Carnegie Merger Off"
7740:Mangaliman, Jessie (November 21, 1987).
7709:Deutsch, Claudia H. (October 11, 1992).
7356:
7269:
7235:
6983:
6824:
6526:
6453:
6419:
6331:
6187:
6145:
6088:
6035:
5879:
4361:
4263:
4209:
4145:
3994:
3812:
3709:
3664:. Vol. 70, no. 4. p. 35.
3619:Weathersby, William Jr. (January 2005).
3540:
3531:
3490:
2727:
2695:
2138:
2039:
2037:
1551:. On November 14, 1943, the 25-year-old
1383:
1327:
1181:
1152:
1073:
875:
756:
688:
592:Louis H. Chalif Normal School of Dancing
14419:1891 establishments in New York (state)
13228:42nd Street–Port Authority Bus Terminal
12488:The Ritz-Carlton New York, Central Park
12398:InterContinental New York Barclay Hotel
9992:. Oxford University Press. p. 16.
9935:from the original on September 19, 2020
9885:
9084:
8798:from the original on September 16, 2013
8733:
8676:
8283:
7708:
7580:
7524:
7424:
7390:
7270:Whitaker, Barbara (December 16, 1986).
7204:
7142:
6950:
6895:
6863:
6760:Phelps, Timothy M. (January 18, 1981).
6726:
6485:
5723:
5695:
5634:
5161:
4178:
4112:
4053:Phelps, Timothy M. (January 18, 1981).
3855:
3478:from the original on September 16, 2017
3299:
3266:from the original on September 16, 2017
3163:
2658:
2324:. New York: Random House. p. 232.
2108:from the original on September 22, 2015
2081:from the original on September 20, 2015
1827:as the second party include an unnamed
14:
14406:
13125:CUNY School of Labor and Urban Studies
11222:New York City Bar Association Building
10075:from the original on December 16, 2014
10022:McLellan, Joseph (February 10, 1991).
9956:
9538:from the original on November 21, 2021
9508:from the original on November 21, 2021
9470:
9192:"2,900-Voice Chorus Joins The Beatles"
9186:
9105:from the original on November 21, 2021
9029:
9000:
8789:
8489:from the original on November 21, 2021
8483:Spectrum News NY1 | New York City
8361:from the original on December 14, 2019
8320:Cooper, Michael (September 12, 2014).
8319:
8194:Wakin, Daniel J. (September 1, 2007).
8138:
8071:
8041:Wakin, Daniel J. (November 25, 2005).
7972:
7772:
7644:
7506:from the original on November 19, 2018
7490:
7453:
7362:"Weill Recital Hall Opens at Carnegie"
7207:"Restoring Carnegie Hall to Its Glory"
7173:
7047:
6759:
6580:
6560:
6527:Schumach, Murray (November 14, 1977).
6362:
6301:"Carnegie Hall Made National Landmark"
6111:
5960:from the original on February 27, 2021
5845:
4509:"Incorporating a Music Hall Company".
4308:
4148:"Editta Sherman, 96-Year-Old Squatter"
4146:Pressler, Jessica (October 20, 2008).
4083:
4052:
3818:"Weill Recital Hall Opens at Carnegie"
3743:
3637:from the original on November 27, 2021
3579:
3556:from the original on November 20, 2018
3364:from the original on November 20, 2018
3348:
3228:Goldberger, Paul (September 8, 1983).
2405:
2260:from the original on November 27, 2020
2229:from the original on February 24, 2021
2163:from the original on February 19, 2021
1874:asked if it was hot in there. Pianist
574:apartment building. It also faces the
13724:
13539:
13482:
13186:
12639:
12319:
11916:
10869:
10818:
10347:
9957:Pollak, Michael (November 29, 2009).
9919:
9308:
9260:from the original on February 7, 2019
8976:"A Snapshot of Jazz at Carnegie Hall"
8779:. University of South Carolina Press.
8567:
8476:
8411:Hernández, Javier C. (June 8, 2021).
8392:from the original on January 20, 2017
8219:
8193:
8168:Wakin, Daniel J. (December 3, 2005).
8167:
8105:
8040:
7954:from the original on December 6, 2018
7581:Koenenn, Joseph C. (April 23, 1991).
7555:
7109:
6623:
6589:
6251:. National Park Service. May 30, 1975
5912:"A red tower replacing Carnegie Hall"
5609:
5400:The New York Herald, New York Tribune
5321:The New York Herald, New York Tribune
5268:The New York Herald, New York Tribune
4945:
4549:from the original on January 31, 2022
4398:from the original on January 30, 2022
4179:Slotnik, Daniel E. (April 22, 2017).
4160:from the original on October 14, 2012
4127:from the original on January 25, 2019
3861:"Carnegie Recital Hall to Be Renamed"
3749:"When Expansion Leads to Inner Space"
3656:Lewis, Julia Einspruch (March 1999).
3655:
3382:
3142:from the original on January 30, 2022
2828:
2496:from the original on January 30, 2022
2385:
2296:from the original on November 9, 2020
2223:Metropolitan Transportation Authority
2034:
1654:. The Benny Goodman Orchestra gave a
935:
523:Carnegie Hall is on the east side of
14398:National Register of Historic Places
13233:47th–50th Streets–Rockefeller Center
13223:42nd Street–Bryant Park/Fifth Avenue
12523:Thompson Central Park New York Hotel
12513:Sheraton New York Times Square Hotel
10168:
10158:National Register of Historic Places
10130:from the original on August 21, 2021
10093:
9987:
9969:from the original on August 12, 2019
9898:from the original on August 26, 2020
9860:
9842:from the original on August 20, 2021
9791:
9723:
9676:from the original on August 19, 2021
9646:from the original on August 19, 2021
9426:from the original on August 18, 2020
9286:. September 22, 2012. Archived from
8896:
8870:
8762:
8638:
8612:
8545:. Associated Press. April 26, 2022.
8519:from the original on October 6, 2021
8477:Simon, Stephanie (October 6, 2021).
8458:from the original on August 19, 2021
8380:Warerkar, Tanay (January 17, 2017).
8296:from the original on August 20, 2021
8265:from the original on August 20, 2021
8235:from the original on August 20, 2021
8120:from the original on August 20, 2021
8087:from the original on August 20, 2021
8053:from the original on August 19, 2021
8022:from the original on August 19, 2021
7988:from the original on August 19, 2021
7922:from the original on August 19, 2021
7889:from the original on August 19, 2021
7855:from the original on August 20, 2021
7821:from the original on August 20, 2021
7806:
7788:from the original on August 20, 2021
7754:from the original on August 20, 2021
7721:from the original on August 20, 2021
7690:from the original on August 20, 2021
7660:from the original on August 20, 2021
7626:from the original on August 21, 2021
7595:from the original on August 21, 2021
7537:from the original on August 18, 2021
7525:Shepard, Richard F. (May 12, 1988).
7469:from the original on August 20, 2021
7406:from the original on August 20, 2021
7372:from the original on August 18, 2021
7338:from the original on August 21, 2021
7282:from the original on August 19, 2021
7251:from the original on August 19, 2021
7217:from the original on August 20, 2021
7186:from the original on August 20, 2021
7155:from the original on August 20, 2021
7124:from the original on August 20, 2021
7060:from the original on August 21, 2021
7029:from the original on August 21, 2021
6999:from the original on August 19, 2021
6965:from the original on August 20, 2021
6896:Goodman, Peter (December 16, 1985).
6840:from the original on August 19, 2021
6803:from the original on August 19, 2021
6790:
6772:from the original on August 20, 2021
6741:from the original on August 19, 2021
6705:from the original on August 21, 2021
6666:from the original on August 21, 2021
6636:from the original on August 19, 2021
6605:from the original on August 19, 2021
6539:from the original on August 20, 2021
6435:from the original on August 19, 2021
6378:from the original on August 19, 2021
6344:from the original on August 20, 2021
6332:Callahan, John P. (August 7, 1967).
6313:from the original on August 19, 2021
6281:from the original on August 19, 2021
6203:from the original on August 19, 2021
6127:from the original on August 20, 2021
6070:from the original on August 14, 2021
5880:Callahan, John P. (August 8, 1957).
5827:from the original on August 19, 2021
5677:from the original on October 4, 2020
5647:from the original on August 30, 2020
5610:Walsh, Michael (February 16, 1987).
5588:from the original on August 24, 2021
5459:from the original on August 24, 2021
5353:from the original on August 24, 2021
5300:from the original on August 14, 2021
5195:
5174:from the original on August 18, 2021
5162:Shepard, Richard F. (May 12, 1988).
5143:from the original on August 20, 2021
5087:from the original on August 20, 2021
4927:from the original on August 18, 2021
4893:from the original on August 18, 2021
4796:from the original on August 18, 2021
4766:from the original on August 18, 2021
4736:from the original on August 18, 2021
4700:from the original on August 18, 2021
4634:from the original on August 18, 2021
4581:from the original on August 18, 2021
4490:from the original on August 17, 2021
4456:from the original on August 17, 2021
4346:
4287:from the original on August 17, 2021
4251:
4228:from the original on August 21, 2021
4113:Goodman, Wendy (December 30, 2007).
3896:
3871:from the original on August 21, 2021
3828:from the original on August 18, 2021
3759:from the original on August 19, 2021
3725:from the original on August 19, 2021
3668:from the original on August 19, 2021
3595:from the original on August 19, 2021
3519:from the original on January 9, 2015
3444:from the original on August 19, 2021
3293:
3240:from the original on August 21, 2021
3178:from the original on August 19, 2021
3103:from the original on October 5, 2021
3053:
3018:from the original on August 18, 2021
2961:
2930:National Register of Historic Places
2906:from the original on August 20, 2021
2841:from the original on August 20, 2021
2642:from the original on August 18, 2021
2367:from the original on August 23, 2021
2247:
2023:National Register of Historic Places
1941:
1782:, formerly managing director of the
27:Concert venue in Manhattan, New York
13120:Circle in the Square Theatre School
12368:Crowne Plaza Times Square Manhattan
12348:The Benjamin Royal Sonesta New York
9205:from the original on March 25, 2020
9138:from the original on March 25, 2020
8774:
8706:Francesconi, Gino (April 1, 2004).
8225:"A Requiem for Tenants of Carnegie"
8139:Dobnik, Verena (December 3, 2005).
7614:Zakariasen, Bill (April 23, 1991).
7079:Goldberger, Paul (April 30, 1986).
7048:Purdum, Todd S. (January 5, 1986).
6898:"Carnegie gets $ 3.7 Million gifts"
6561:Herman, Robin (February 26, 1979).
6222:Greenwood, Richard (May 30, 1975).
5892:from the original on March 31, 2018
4026:
3630:. Vol. 193. pp. 157–161.
3321:from the original on March 21, 2015
3164:Shepard, Joan (December 15, 1986).
2289:. November 13, 2001. pp. 6–7.
2010:
1559:in a concert that was broadcast by
1411:
1122:hymn, a speech by Episcopal bishop
956:
671:American Society of Civil Engineers
24:
13483:
13187:
11795:St. Bartholomew's Episcopal Church
10263:
10036:from the original on June 26, 2022
9812:from the original on July 27, 2020
9773:from the original on July 27, 2020
9168:from the original on April 7, 2013
9060:"Jazz: Band From Cuba Is an Extra"
8817:Francesconi, Gino (June 1, 2004).
6685:Goldberger, Paul (March 7, 1982).
5994:from the original on June 26, 2022
5924:from the original on July 27, 2020
5858:from the original on June 26, 2022
5797:from the original on June 26, 2022
5535:. September 29, 1935. p. 24.
5107:"Grand Opera Need Not Be Given Up"
4670:from the original on June 26, 2022
3395:from the original on March 6, 2021
2940:from the original on July 27, 2020
2593:from the original on July 27, 2020
2193:from the original on June 26, 2022
2128:"History of the Hall: History FAQ"
1453:COVID-19 pandemic in New York City
1280:
616:57th Street–Seventh Avenue station
25:
14500:
11700:Fifth Church of Christ, Scientist
11272:St. Malachy Roman Catholic Church
10312:
9471:Kaliss, Jeff (November 2, 2023).
9224:Schaffner, Nicholas (July 1977).
9035:"Jazz: Strange Double Piano Bill"
8790:Hudson, Rob (September 3, 2007).
8549:from the original on June 9, 2022
8332:from the original on July 6, 2017
7112:"Carnegie Plans For Office Tower"
7091:from the original on May 24, 2015
7050:"Art Slows Carnegie's Rebuilding"
6624:Smith, Randy (October 21, 1980).
6158:from the original on May 24, 2019
5920:. September 9, 1957. p. 91.
5711:from the original on May 30, 2022
5673:. The Carnegie Hall Corporation.
5512:from the original on May 30, 2022
5482:. September 8, 1935. p. 23.
5270:. September 12, 1924. p. 1.
4542:. December 15, 1889. p. 11.
4115:"Great Rooms: Bohemia in Midtown"
4084:Moritz, Owen (January 11, 1978).
3982:from the original on July 9, 2017
3789:from the original on July 9, 2017
3658:"A new stage for a hallowed hall"
3469:
2831:"The Carnegie Hall of the Future"
2761:. September 10, 1889. p. 7.
2248:Gray, Christopher (May 9, 1999).
1754:, and the last public lecture by
1398:Tishman Realty & Construction
1177:
1148:
904:American Academy of Dramatic Arts
14391:
14379:
14367:
14355:
14329:
14319:
14310:
14309:
13810:
13803:
13040:Women's National Republican Club
12888:Austrian Cultural Forum New York
12443:Millennium Times Square New York
11180:Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church
10374:New York City performance spaces
10087:
9981:
9886:Carlson, Matt (April 10, 2020).
9854:
9824:
9785:
9746:
9688:
9658:
9628:
9602:
9576:
9550:
9520:
9490:
9404:
9272:
9242:
9217:
9180:
9150:
9117:
9078:
9052:
9023:
8994:
8942:
8916:
8890:
8864:
8838:
8783:
8768:
8727:
8699:
8670:
8632:
8606:
8568:Orlow, Emma (January 10, 2024).
8501:
8404:
8284:Robbins, Liz (August 28, 2010).
8277:
8247:
8213:
8099:
8065:
8034:
8000:
7966:
7934:
7867:
7833:
7807:Page, Tim (September 14, 1995).
7800:
7766:
7733:
7702:
7672:
7638:
7616:"Carnegie halls out its history"
7607:
7574:
7518:
7447:
7384:
7350:
7320:
7294:
7272:"Reborn Splendor on 57th Street"
7263:
7229:
7198:
7167:
7143:Shepard, Joan (April 30, 1986).
7136:
7103:
7072:
7041:
7011:
6977:
6944:
6918:
6784:
6753:
6678:
6648:
6617:
6520:
6515:Stern, Fishman & Tilove 2006
6413:
6390:
6356:
6325:
6293:
6263:
6241:
6215:
6139:
6105:
6082:
6052:
6029:
6006:
5972:
5936:
5904:
5839:
5809:
5779:
5689:
5667:"Carnegie Hall History Timeline"
5659:
5628:
5570:
5494:
5437:
5402:. February 6, 1925. p. 26.
5335:
5323:. January 30, 1925. p. 11.
5282:
5155:
5125:
4843:Stern, Fishman & Tilove 2006
4313:. New York: Viking. p. 77.
4210:Stephens, Suzanne (March 1992).
3959:Stern, Fishman & Tilove 2006
3698:Stern, Fishman & Tilove 2006
3216:Stern, Fishman & Tilove 2006
2869:. December 28, 1892. p. 7.
2679:Guide to New York City Landmarks
2522:. November 21, 1889. p. 7.
2437:. Monacelli Press. p. 691.
2360:. December 16, 2008. p. 2.
1953:
1519:Philadelphia Symphonic Orchestra
1469:World premieres at Carnegie Hall
1446:American Institute of Architects
1378:American Institute of Architects
927:insulation pads, was installed.
418:
123:
117:
111:
105:
12903:Korean Cultural Center New York
11830:William and Helen Ziegler House
8667:, concert on November 14, 1943.
8613:Gold, Gerald (March 21, 1990).
8106:Frank, Robert (March 3, 2006).
7334:. January 3, 1987. p. 45.
7304:. Carnegie Hall. Archived from
7110:Flynn, Kevin (April 30, 1986).
6951:Goodman, Peter (May 20, 1985).
6864:Shepard, Joan (July 28, 1986).
6727:Goodman, Peter (July 4, 1982).
6309:. November 7, 1964. p. 9.
5846:Fowler, Glenn (July 25, 1956).
5069:
5046:
5026:"Carnegie Music Hall Dedicated"
4979:"Music Crowd in Its New Home".
4972:
4939:
4905:
4871:
4848:
4808:
4778:
4748:
4716:
4682:
4646:
4616:
4593:
4561:
4525:
4502:
4472:
4410:
4269:
4172:
4139:
4106:
3899:"Carnegie renames recital hall"
3897:Nash, Dawn (November 6, 1986).
3771:
3737:
3703:
3649:
3376:
3252:
3221:
3085:
2967:
2918:
2829:Kraus, Lucy (August 31, 1986).
2534:
2379:
2343:
2308:
2272:
2130:. Carnegie Hall. Archived from
1737:
1656:sold-out swing and jazz concert
1222:
255:U.S. National Historic Landmark
14454:Music venues completed in 1891
14434:Concert halls in New York City
13130:High School of Performing Arts
12893:Girl Scout Museum and Archives
10024:"The Hall That Carnegie Built"
9158:"The Beatles at Carnegie Hall"
7205:Goodman, Peter (May 8, 1986).
7174:Larkin, Kathy (May 15, 1986).
7145:"Deal will make Carnegie tall"
6791:King, Martin (April 2, 1982).
6729:"A building boom for the arts"
5113:. September 6, 1892. p. 7
4819:. March 22, 1891. p. 24.
4663:. January 1, 1893. p. 9.
3973:
2548:. May 28, 2016. Archived from
2386:Scher, Robin (July 19, 2016).
2241:
2205:
2175:
2120:
2059:
1808:
892:
697:Carnegie Hall was designed by
460:, New York City. It is at 881
361:
350:
337:
276:
40:Carnegie Hall (disambiguation)
13:
1:
13010:New York City Bar Association
13000:Harvard Club of New York City
11155:Church of St. Mary the Virgin
10870:
10198:. New York: Monacelli Press.
4792:. March 13, 1891. p. 3.
4513:. March 28, 1889. p. 1.
4423:. March 15, 1889. p. 1.
4391:. March 15, 1889. p. 4.
3385:"Judy and Arthur Zankel Hall"
1929:
1868:
1711:What You Hear is What You Get
1144:Late 19th to mid-20th century
14286:National Historic Landmarks
13566:New York City historic sites
13278:Lexington Avenue/59th Street
13273:Lexington Avenue/51st Street
12393:Hyatt Grand Central New York
12353:Cassa Hotel & Residences
11917:
11680:Church of Sweden in New York
11670:Charles Scribner's Sons Bldg
11227:New York Yacht Club Building
10098:. Amadeus Press. p. 4.
9349:. Backbeat. pp. 89–90.
8775:Lee, Maureen D. (May 2012).
6017:. July 21, 1958. p. 3.
5425:. June 2, 1929. p. F9.
4859:. April 2, 1891. p. 4.
4724:"Damrosch's Liberal Backers"
4480:"The New Music Hall Company"
3621:"Zankel Hall, New York City"
3312:
3260:"Information: Accessibility"
2489:. July 19, 1889. p. 8.
2003:
1276:Deterioration and renovation
1107:Real Estate Record and Guide
1036:Oratorio Society of New York
489:Oratorio Society of New York
184:; 133 years ago
7:
13633:National Historic Landmarks
13527:Manhattan Community Board 5
13263:59th Street–Columbus Circle
13035:University Club of New York
12898:John M. Mossman Lock Museum
12579:New York Marriott East Side
12423:Lotte New York Palace Hotel
12373:Four Seasons Hotel New York
11891:William K. Vanderbilt House
11856:Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont House
10846:Midtown (42nd–59th Streets)
10615:Clark Monroe's Uptown House
10533:Playhouse Creatures Theatre
9666:"Clive Gillinson Biography"
6953:"Carnegie Hall renovations"
6401:. May 29, 1961. p. 4.
5558:. May 6, 1936. p. 16.
5057:. May 12, 1892. p. 7.
4885:. May 6, 1891. pp. 1,
4604:. May 14, 1890. p. 7.
3126:"Carnegie Hall's New Lobby"
1896:
1803:
1671:Bill Haley & His Comets
1567:Other concerts and recitals
1314:memorandum of understanding
136:Government of New York City
10:
14505:
14479:Seventh Avenue (Manhattan)
13253:57th Street–Seventh Avenue
13061:Princeton Club of New York
13045:Yale Club of New York City
12980:American Fine Arts Society
12320:
11610:550 Madison Av (Sony Bldg)
11595:488 Madison Av (Look Bldg)
10655:Orchard (artist-run space)
10273:The World of Carnegie Hall
10270:Schickel, Richard (1960).
10146:
9377:Goldsmith, M.U.D. (2019).
9315:. Soundcheck. p. 67.
8897:N.S. (December 12, 1943).
4008:National Park Service 1962
3166:"Encore for Carnegie Hall"
3093:"Parking & Directions"
2807:. May 6, 1891. p. 5.
2709:National Park Service 1962
2338:WPA Guide to New York City
2102:Collins English Dictionary
1717:recorded its 4-LP box set
1466:
1266:National Historic Landmark
1025:
693:Original building at night
663:American Fine Arts Society
509:National Historic Landmark
103:57th Street–Seventh Avenue
60:Carnegie Hall in June 2019
29:
14459:Music venues in Manhattan
14305:
14274:
14154:
13819:
13801:
13762:
13648:
13571:
13521:
13489:
13478:
13312:
13291:
13268:Grand Central–42nd Street
13197:
13193:
13182:
13153:
13145:SUNY College of Optometry
13140:Saint Thomas Choir School
13105:
13069:
13053:
12972:
12951:
12913:Museum of Arts and Design
12878:
12650:
12646:
12635:
12541:
12453:New York Marriott Marquis
12330:
12326:
12315:
12196:
12125:
11927:
11923:
11912:
11838:
11620:590 Madison Av (IBM Bldg)
11475:
11388:
11315:
10880:
10876:
10865:
10852:
10794:Music venues in Manhattan
10736:
10668:
10445:
10379:
10338:Honors Performance Series
9753:Binkowski, C. J. (2016).
8871:R.P. (January 15, 1942).
8108:"Perelman's New Platform"
7742:"Expanding Carnegie Hall"
5637:"Elsa Mandelstamm Gidoni"
4985:. May 6, 1891. p. 7.
4756:"Our Permanent Orchestra"
2632:"The Carnegie Music Hall"
1784:London Symphony Orchestra
1774:Management and operations
1515:Boston Symphony Orchestra
1437:Joan and Sanford I. Weill
1040:New York Symphony Society
995:and fashion photographer
862:Charles Rennie Mackintosh
813:
728:
550:Carnegie Hall shares the
493:New York Symphony Society
407:
399:
391:
383:
375:
370:
359:
348:
336:NRHP reference
335:
325:
288:
284:
270:
261:
252:
243:
236:
232:
228:
221:
216:
206:
196:
178:
173:
159:
149:
145:Carnegie Hall Corporation
141:
131:
92:
69:
65:
53:
14039:Richmond (Staten Island)
13283:Times Square–42nd Street
13213:Fifth Avenue–59th Street
13208:Fifth Avenue/53rd Street
12995:Cornell Club of New York
12908:Madame Tussauds New York
12641:Other points of interest
12528:Waldorf Astoria New York
12343:Allerton Hotel for Women
11896:West Presbyterian Church
11886:Vanderbilt Triple Palace
11861:Sherwood Studio Building
11200:Manufacturers Trust Bldg
10935:30 W 44th St (Penn Club)
9759:. McFarland. p. 1.
9125:"Stars assist the blind"
5445:"Oratorio Society Gives
5034:. May 6, 1891. p. 1
4946:Yoffe, Elkhonon (1986).
4446:"Out Among the Builders"
4309:Shanor, Rebecca (1988).
2316:Federal Writers' Project
1934:
1760:City College of New York
1720:Chicago at Carnegie Hall
1319:
1161:Almost from the outset,
1138:Metropolitan Opera House
1128:Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
1044:Walter Johannes Damrosch
748:architectural terracotta
472:. Designed by architect
456:) is a concert venue in
326:Architectural style
31:Not to be confused with
14424:57th Street (Manhattan)
13030:Racquet and Tennis Club
12928:New York Transit Museum
12574:New York Biltmore Hotel
12448:New York Hilton Midtown
12403:JW Marriott Essex House
11800:St. Patrick's Cathedral
11370:British Empire Building
10799:Performing arts centers
10620:The Cooler (night club)
10172:Carnegie Hall Treasures
8846:"Hot Music at Carnegie"
8819:"Jazz at Carnegie Hall"
8113:The Wall Street Journal
6989:"Carnegie Hall's Plans"
6866:"Carnegie crescendoing"
6399:New York Herald Tribune
6091:New York Herald Tribune
6038:New York Herald Tribune
5556:New York Herald Tribune
5533:New York Herald Tribune
5480:New York Herald Tribune
5423:New York Herald Tribune
4879:"The Music Hall Opened"
4031:The Wall Street Journal
1951:pronounced his surname
1734:to perform in America.
1703:issued in several parts
1478:Orchestral performances
1463:Events and performances
1070:Development and opening
685:Architecture and venues
518:
169:Weill Recital Hall: 268
165:Stern Auditorium: 2,804
13775:Keeper of the Register
13304:Grand Central Terminal
13005:New York Athletic Club
12933:Paley Center for Media
12790:The Pool and the Grill
12735:Gallagher's Steakhouse
12720:Ellen's Stardust Diner
12533:Warwick New York Hotel
12518:Sofitel New York Hotel
12473:The Peninsula New York
12363:Club Quarters, Midtown
11881:Union Carbide Building
11760:William H. Moore House
11515:100 E 53rd St (Selene)
11375:International Building
11205:Mark Hellinger Theatre
11130:Calvary Baptist Church
10718:Jean Cocteau Repertory
10696:Soho Repertory Theatre
8642:(September 20, 1985).
8010:(September 15, 2003).
7976:(September 12, 2003).
7776:(September 20, 1995).
7494:(September 14, 1995).
7457:(September 22, 1988).
6306:Democrat and Chronicle
5793:. September 18, 1955.
5635:Stratigakos, Despina.
5624:on September 30, 2007.
5508:. September 29, 1935.
5139:. September 19, 1892.
4569:"A New Home for Music"
4212:"Architectural Ethics"
3544:(September 12, 2003).
3515:. September 15, 2003.
1839:", as well as pianist
1816:
1795:Carnegie Hall Archives
1541:NBC Symphony Orchestra
1457:Philadelphia Orchestra
1344:, later to become the
1336:
1187:
1158:
1079:
881:
880:Isaac Stern Auditorium
762:
694:
602:to the southwest; and
535:, two blocks south of
474:William Burnet Tuthill
392:Designated NYSRHP
273:New York City Landmark
14484:Theatres in Manhattan
14295:Outside New York City
13790:National Park Service
13770:Contributing property
13337:Six and a Half Avenue
13299:Grand Central Madison
13025:Penn Club of New York
12408:The Iroquois New York
12168:Radio City Music Hall
12133:55th Street Playhouse
11715:General Electric Bldg
11115:Bergdorf Goodman Bldg
11110:Bank of America Tower
10407:Radio City Music Hall
10402:Madison Square Garden
10162:National Park Service
10096:Heifetz As I Knew Him
10063:(December 28, 1987).
9534:. November 22, 1906.
9343:Brackett, D. (2020).
9190:(February 13, 1964).
8708:"The Maestro Retires"
8680:(December 27, 1950).
7877:(December 14, 1998).
7239:(December 16, 1986).
6228:National Park Service
6191:(February 21, 1982).
5944:"Red-and-gold Checks"
5612:"Sounds in the night"
5455:. December 28, 1929.
5083:. September 5, 1892.
4283:. February 16, 1885.
3383:Kinneberg, Caroline.
2934:National Park Service
2902:. December 28, 1892.
2183:"881 7 Avenue, 10019"
2028:National Park Service
1903:Alliance for the Arts
1812:
1707:Ike & Tina Turner
1534:Mieczysław Horszowski
1384:1990s and early 2000s
1335:next to Carnegie Hall
1331:
1306:James Stewart Polshek
1229:New York Philharmonic
1186:Carnegie Hall in 1910
1185:
1157:Carnegie Hall in 1895
1156:
1078:Andrew Carnegie, 1913
1077:
929:JaffeHolden Acoustics
879:
833:New York Philharmonic
760:
692:
511:and protected by the
501:New York Philharmonic
310:40.76500°N 73.98000°W
13979:New York (Manhattan)
13015:New York Friars Club
12923:Museum of Modern Art
12800:The Original Soupman
12715:Del Pezzo Restaurant
12584:Omni Berkshire Place
12358:The Chatwal New York
12158:New York City Center
11972:Circle in the Square
11846:Grand Central Palace
11185:Gainsborough Studios
11170:Deutsche Bank Center
11105:Axa Equitable Center
10686:Mint Theater Company
10625:Cornelia Street Cafe
10488:Nuyorican Poets Café
10164:. December 29, 1962.
10126:. February 8, 1976.
10061:Schonberg, Harold C.
9838:. February 9, 2021.
9504:. January 23, 1906.
9414:(January 28, 1956).
9256:. October 17, 1969.
9085:Tackley, C. (2012).
8930:. September 17, 1956
8425:on December 28, 2021
8073:Gelder, Lawrence Van
7918:. November 1, 2001.
7648:(February 8, 1992).
7394:(January 29, 1987).
6662:. January 21, 1981.
6593:(October 21, 1980).
6277:. November 7, 1964.
5980:Schonberg, Harold C.
5349:. January 30, 1925.
5296:. February 1, 1925.
4997:Schonberg, Harold C.
4913:Schonberg, Harold C.
4786:"A New Concert Room"
4624:"The New Music Hall"
3976:"Weill Recital Hall"
3859:(November 6, 1986).
3779:"Weill Recital Hall"
3628:Architectural Record
3583:(January 12, 1999).
3472:"Zankel Hall Rental"
3352:(January 30, 2000).
2936:. October 15, 1966.
2075:Macmillan Dictionary
2055:on November 6, 2007.
1835:, or "absent-minded
1752:Booker T. Washington
1406:September 11 attacks
1254:Robert F. Wagner Jr.
1058:, as well as around
707:Adler & Sullivan
659:140 West 57th Street
612:New York City Subway
608:New York City Center
400:Designated NYCL
38:For other uses, see
14282:Bridges and tunnels
13442:Park Avenue Viaduct
13161:Galerie St. Etienne
13115:53rd Street Library
13054:Clubhouses (former)
13020:New York Yacht Club
12990:Century Association
12825:The Quilted Giraffe
12153:New Victory Theater
12143:Ed Sullivan Theater
11871:Studebaker Building
11720:General Motors Bldg
11705:Fred F. French Bldg
11380:La Maison Francaise
11210:Times Square Church
11135:Carnegie Hall Tower
10779:List of jazz venues
10573:Rockwood Music Hall
10558:Blue Note Jazz Club
10094:Agus, Ayke (2001).
9988:Lees, Gene (1988).
9226:The Beatles Forever
9004:(January 8, 1968).
8515:. October 6, 2021.
8261:. August 12, 2007.
7950:. October 8, 2003.
7841:Oestreich, James R.
7620:New York Daily News
7360:(January 6, 1987).
7180:New York Daily News
7149:New York Daily News
6871:New York Daily News
6797:New York Daily News
6630:New York Daily News
6517:, pp. 731–732.
5951:Architectural Forum
4266:, pp. 144–145.
4091:New York Daily News
3961:, pp. 732–733.
3904:New York Daily News
3816:(January 6, 1987).
3432:(January 3, 1998).
3171:New York Daily News
2321:New York City Guide
2098:in British English"
2067:"American English:
2030:. January 23, 2007.
1891:Sergei Rachmaninoff
1862:The Washington Post
1764:New York Law School
1511:Sergei Rachmaninoff
1499:Camille Saint-Saëns
1495:Ruggero Leoncavallo
1346:Carnegie Hall Tower
1333:Carnegie Hall Tower
1310:Polshek Partnership
1034:, the conductor of
915:(7.6 m) deep.
719:Italian Renaissance
703:Richard Morris Hunt
566:to the east. It is
556:Carnegie Hall Tower
384:Designated NHL
330:Renaissance Revival
315:40.76500; -73.98000
306: /
50:
12918:Museum of Broadway
12835:Restaurant Aquavit
12700:Campbell Apartment
12609:Times Square Hotel
12594:Ritz-Carlton Hotel
12508:St. Regis New York
12463:Park Central Hotel
12178:The Theater Center
12087:Samuel J. Friedman
11650:Apple Fifth Avenue
11345:75 Rockefeller Plz
11340:50 Rockefeller Plz
11335:30 Rockefeller Plz
11330:10 Rockefeller Plz
11317:Rockefeller Center
11257:Random House Tower
11217:Metropolitan Tower
11145:Central Park Tower
11140:Central Park Place
11005:240 Central Park S
10995:220 Central Park S
10985:200 Central Park S
10728:Velvet Underground
10691:New York Live Arts
10538:The Public Theater
10493:Pete's Candy Store
10169:Page, Tim (2011).
10124:The New York Times
10069:The New York Times
9963:The New York Times
9701:The New York Times
9614:The New York Times
9588:The New York Times
9562:The New York Times
9532:The New York Times
9502:The New York Times
9452:. January 28, 2015
9420:The New York Times
9309:Rabey, B. (2013).
9199:The New York Times
9132:The New York Times
9064:The New York Times
9039:The New York Times
9033:(April 19, 1977).
9010:The New York Times
8956:. February 9, 1947
8954:The New York Times
8928:The New York Times
8903:The New York Times
8877:The New York Times
8852:. January 18, 1938
8850:The New York Times
8743:The New York Times
8686:The New York Times
8648:The New York Times
8619:The New York Times
8593:The New York Times
8417:The New York Times
8326:The New York Times
8290:The New York Times
8229:The New York Times
8223:(August 1, 2007).
8200:The New York Times
8174:The New York Times
8081:The New York Times
8047:The New York Times
8016:The New York Times
8008:Tommasini, Anthony
7982:The New York Times
7916:The New York Times
7883:The New York Times
7849:The New York Times
7782:The New York Times
7715:The New York Times
7654:The New York Times
7531:The New York Times
7500:The New York Times
7463:The New York Times
7434:The New York Times
7428:(April 16, 1987).
7400:The New York Times
7366:The New York Times
7245:The New York Times
7085:The New York Times
7054:The New York Times
7023:The New York Times
6993:The New York Times
6987:(April 16, 1986).
6930:The New York Times
6834:The New York Times
6766:The New York Times
6691:The New York Times
6660:The New York Times
6599:The New York Times
6567:The New York Times
6533:The New York Times
6495:The New York Times
6489:(March 20, 1969).
6463:The New York Times
6455:Strongin, Theodore
6429:The New York Times
6372:The New York Times
6338:The New York Times
6275:The New York Times
6197:The New York Times
6152:The New York Times
6121:The New York Times
6115:(April 30, 1960).
6066:. March 31, 1960.
6064:The New York Times
5988:The New York Times
5886:The New York Times
5852:The New York Times
5821:The New York Times
5791:The New York Times
5705:The New York Times
5699:(April 28, 1955).
5582:The New York Times
5506:The New York Times
5453:The New York Times
5379:. February 6, 1925
5377:The New York Times
5347:The New York Times
5294:The New York Times
5247:. January 31, 1925
5245:The New York Times
5216:The New York Times
5168:The New York Times
5137:The New York Times
5081:The New York Times
5005:The New York Times
4921:The New York Times
4857:The New York Times
4661:The New York Times
4540:The New York Times
4486:. March 28, 1889.
4484:The New York Times
4389:The New York Times
4281:The New York Times
4185:The New York Times
4059:The New York Times
3935:The New York Times
3865:The New York Times
3822:The New York Times
3753:The New York Times
3719:The New York Times
3589:The New York Times
3550:The New York Times
3438:The New York Times
3358:The New York Times
3234:The New York Times
3071:The New York Times
2900:The New York Times
2835:The New York Times
2805:The New York Times
2675:Dolkart, Andrew S.
2487:The New York Times
2254:The New York Times
1584:James Reese Europe
1503:Alexander Scriabin
1337:
1188:
1159:
1085:The New York Times
1080:
1052:Robert A. M. Stern
936:Weill Recital Hall
923:girders and thick
882:
763:
750:originally by the
695:
600:Park Central Hotel
598:to the north; the
580:888 Seventh Avenue
564:Metropolitan Tower
48:
14449:Midtown Manhattan
14343:
14342:
13780:Historic district
13718:
13717:
13573:National Register
13533:
13532:
13517:
13516:
13494:Billionaires' Row
13474:
13473:
13470:
13469:
13462:Vanderbilt Avenue
13422:George Abbott Way
13292:Railroad stations
13178:
13177:
13174:
13173:
12959:Argosy Book Store
12750:Iridium Jazz Club
12631:
12630:
12627:
12626:
12604:Savoy-Plaza Hotel
12493:Roger Smith Hotel
12311:
12310:
12307:
12306:
12249:George M. Cohan's
12197:Closed/demolished
11987:Gerald Schoenfeld
11952:Bernard B. Jacobs
11929:Broadway theaters
11908:
11907:
11904:
11903:
11815:Tiffany & Co.
11785:Saks Fifth Avenue
11775:Park Avenue Tower
11665:Central Synagogue
11471:
11470:
11325:1 Rockefeller Plz
11282:Salmon Tower Bldg
11277:St. Thomas Church
11252:Philippine Center
10812:
10811:
10804:Theatre companies
10706:The Wooster Group
10635:Gerde's Folk City
10630:The Gaslight Cafe
10528:Performing Garage
10304:978-0-8109-0773-7
10283:978-0-8371-6946-0
10247:978-0-89659-458-6
10205:978-1-58093-177-9
10182:978-0-06-170367-6
10175:. HarperCollins.
10105:978-1-57467-062-2
9999:978-0-19-504611-3
9805:978-0-8160-6976-7
9792:Hill, B. (2005).
9766:978-1-4766-2398-6
9390:978-1-4408-6579-4
9356:978-1-4930-5507-4
9322:978-0-9571442-4-8
9235:978-1-56731-008-5
9098:978-0-19-539830-4
8737:(April 5, 1954).
8075:(March 4, 2006).
7875:Blumenthal, Ralph
7843:(March 5, 1996).
7686:. April 3, 2020.
7559:Los Angeles Times
7025:. July 25, 1985.
6457:(June 30, 1965).
6366:(July 22, 1960).
5198:, pp. 19–20.
4957:978-0-19-504117-0
4915:(June 29, 1980).
4729:The Evening World
4320:978-0-670-80558-7
4254:, pp. 17–18.
3713:(April 3, 2003).
3542:Muschamp, Herbert
3430:Blumenthal, Ralph
3262:. Carnegie Hall.
2688:978-0-470-28963-1
2444:978-1-58093-027-7
2331:978-1-60354-055-1
1947:Although founder
1841:Arthur Rubinstein
1766:, as well as the
1636:Mary Lou Williams
1577:Sissieretta Jones
1553:Leonard Bernstein
1530:Arthur Rubinstein
1523:Leopold Stokowski
1419:Anthony Tommasini
1365:Vladimir Horowitz
1090:Stephen M. Kneval
976:Leonard Bernstein
675:Billionaires' Row
636:, and
541:Midtown Manhattan
458:Midtown Manhattan
411:
410:
387:December 29, 1962
371:Significant dates
16:(Redirected from
14496:
14396:
14395:
14394:
14384:
14383:
14382:
14372:
14371:
14370:
14360:
14359:
14351:
14333:
14323:
14322:
14313:
14312:
13944:Kings (Brooklyn)
13814:
13807:
13806:
13745:
13738:
13731:
13722:
13721:
13710:Scenic landmarks
13560:
13553:
13546:
13537:
13536:
13480:
13479:
13427:Lexington Avenue
13417:Grand Army Plaza
13195:
13194:
13184:
13183:
13087:Grand Army Plaza
12964:Gotham Book Mart
12881:cultural centers
12845:Russian Tea Room
12730:Gabriel Kreuther
12725:Four Twenty Five
12648:
12647:
12637:
12636:
12438:The Michelangelo
12328:
12327:
12317:
12316:
12097:Stephen Sondheim
12012:James Earl Jones
11925:
11924:
11914:
11913:
11790:St. Agnes Church
11755:Modulightor Bldg
11640:731 Lexington Av
11625:599 Lexington Av
11615:569 Lexington Av
11605:525 Lexington Av
11585:450 Lexington Av
11313:
11312:
11307:W. R. Grace Bldg
11262:Rockefeller Apts
10878:
10877:
10867:
10866:
10839:
10832:
10825:
10816:
10815:
10749:Off-off-Broadway
10583:Village Vanguard
10578:Smalls Jazz Club
10523:New World Stages
10518:HERE Arts Center
10368:
10361:
10354:
10345:
10344:
10324:
10323:
10321:Official website
10308:
10287:
10259:
10239:
10236:Elegant New York
10225:
10197:
10186:
10165:
10140:
10139:
10137:
10135:
10116:
10110:
10109:
10091:
10085:
10084:
10082:
10080:
10057:
10046:
10045:
10043:
10041:
10019:
10004:
10003:
9985:
9979:
9978:
9976:
9974:
9954:
9945:
9944:
9942:
9940:
9923:(July 5, 2004).
9917:
9908:
9907:
9905:
9903:
9883:
9870:
9869:
9858:
9852:
9851:
9849:
9847:
9828:
9822:
9821:
9819:
9817:
9789:
9783:
9782:
9780:
9778:
9750:
9744:
9743:
9741:
9739:
9721:
9712:
9711:
9709:
9707:
9692:
9686:
9685:
9683:
9681:
9662:
9656:
9655:
9653:
9651:
9642:. June 1, 2005.
9632:
9626:
9625:
9623:
9621:
9606:
9600:
9599:
9597:
9595:
9580:
9574:
9573:
9571:
9569:
9554:
9548:
9547:
9545:
9543:
9524:
9518:
9517:
9515:
9513:
9494:
9488:
9487:
9485:
9483:
9468:
9462:
9461:
9459:
9457:
9442:
9436:
9435:
9433:
9431:
9408:
9402:
9401:
9399:
9397:
9374:
9368:
9367:
9365:
9363:
9340:
9334:
9333:
9331:
9329:
9306:
9300:
9299:
9297:
9295:
9276:
9270:
9269:
9267:
9265:
9246:
9240:
9239:
9221:
9215:
9214:
9212:
9210:
9196:
9184:
9178:
9177:
9175:
9173:
9154:
9148:
9147:
9145:
9143:
9129:
9121:
9115:
9114:
9112:
9110:
9082:
9076:
9075:
9073:
9071:
9056:
9050:
9049:
9047:
9045:
9027:
9021:
9020:
9018:
9016:
8998:
8992:
8991:
8989:
8987:
8982:. April 25, 2023
8980:carnegiehall.org
8972:
8966:
8965:
8963:
8961:
8946:
8940:
8939:
8937:
8935:
8920:
8914:
8913:
8911:
8909:
8894:
8888:
8887:
8885:
8883:
8868:
8862:
8861:
8859:
8857:
8842:
8836:
8835:
8833:
8831:
8814:
8808:
8807:
8805:
8803:
8787:
8781:
8780:
8772:
8766:
8760:
8754:
8753:
8751:
8749:
8731:
8725:
8724:
8722:
8720:
8703:
8697:
8696:
8694:
8692:
8674:
8668:
8665:CBS announcement
8658:
8656:
8654:
8636:
8630:
8629:
8627:
8625:
8610:
8604:
8603:
8601:
8599:
8584:
8582:
8580:
8565:
8559:
8558:
8556:
8554:
8535:
8529:
8528:
8526:
8524:
8505:
8499:
8498:
8496:
8494:
8474:
8468:
8467:
8465:
8463:
8454:. June 8, 2021.
8444:
8435:
8434:
8432:
8430:
8424:
8419:. Archived from
8408:
8402:
8401:
8399:
8397:
8377:
8371:
8370:
8368:
8366:
8351:
8342:
8341:
8339:
8337:
8317:
8306:
8305:
8303:
8301:
8281:
8275:
8274:
8272:
8270:
8251:
8245:
8244:
8242:
8240:
8217:
8211:
8210:
8208:
8206:
8191:
8185:
8184:
8182:
8180:
8165:
8159:
8158:
8156:
8154:
8146:The Journal News
8136:
8130:
8129:
8127:
8125:
8103:
8097:
8096:
8094:
8092:
8069:
8063:
8062:
8060:
8058:
8038:
8032:
8031:
8029:
8027:
8004:
7998:
7997:
7995:
7993:
7970:
7964:
7963:
7961:
7959:
7938:
7932:
7931:
7929:
7927:
7908:
7899:
7898:
7896:
7894:
7871:
7865:
7864:
7862:
7860:
7837:
7831:
7830:
7828:
7826:
7804:
7798:
7797:
7795:
7793:
7770:
7764:
7763:
7761:
7759:
7737:
7731:
7730:
7728:
7726:
7706:
7700:
7699:
7697:
7695:
7676:
7670:
7669:
7667:
7665:
7642:
7636:
7635:
7633:
7631:
7611:
7605:
7604:
7602:
7600:
7578:
7572:
7571:
7553:
7547:
7546:
7544:
7542:
7522:
7516:
7515:
7513:
7511:
7488:
7479:
7478:
7476:
7474:
7451:
7445:
7444:
7442:
7440:
7426:Holland, Bernard
7422:
7416:
7415:
7413:
7411:
7392:Holland, Bernard
7388:
7382:
7381:
7379:
7377:
7354:
7348:
7347:
7345:
7343:
7324:
7318:
7317:
7315:
7313:
7308:on March 4, 2016
7298:
7292:
7291:
7289:
7287:
7267:
7261:
7260:
7258:
7256:
7233:
7227:
7226:
7224:
7222:
7202:
7196:
7195:
7193:
7191:
7171:
7165:
7164:
7162:
7160:
7140:
7134:
7133:
7131:
7129:
7107:
7101:
7100:
7098:
7096:
7076:
7070:
7069:
7067:
7065:
7045:
7039:
7038:
7036:
7034:
7015:
7009:
7008:
7006:
7004:
6981:
6975:
6974:
6972:
6970:
6948:
6942:
6941:
6939:
6937:
6922:
6916:
6915:
6913:
6911:
6893:
6884:
6883:
6881:
6879:
6861:
6850:
6849:
6847:
6845:
6828:(May 17, 1985).
6822:
6813:
6812:
6810:
6808:
6788:
6782:
6781:
6779:
6777:
6757:
6751:
6750:
6748:
6746:
6724:
6715:
6714:
6712:
6710:
6682:
6676:
6675:
6673:
6671:
6652:
6646:
6645:
6643:
6641:
6621:
6615:
6614:
6612:
6610:
6587:
6578:
6577:
6575:
6573:
6558:
6549:
6548:
6546:
6544:
6524:
6518:
6512:
6506:
6505:
6503:
6501:
6483:
6474:
6473:
6471:
6469:
6451:
6445:
6444:
6442:
6440:
6423:(May 29, 1961).
6421:Crowther, Bosley
6417:
6411:
6410:
6394:
6388:
6387:
6385:
6383:
6360:
6354:
6353:
6351:
6349:
6329:
6323:
6322:
6320:
6318:
6297:
6291:
6290:
6288:
6286:
6267:
6261:
6260:
6258:
6256:
6245:
6239:
6238:
6236:
6234:
6219:
6213:
6212:
6210:
6208:
6185:
6168:
6167:
6165:
6163:
6143:
6137:
6136:
6134:
6132:
6109:
6103:
6102:
6086:
6080:
6079:
6077:
6075:
6056:
6050:
6049:
6033:
6027:
6026:
6010:
6004:
6003:
6001:
5999:
5982:(July 4, 1958).
5976:
5970:
5969:
5967:
5965:
5959:
5948:
5940:
5934:
5933:
5931:
5929:
5908:
5902:
5901:
5899:
5897:
5877:
5868:
5867:
5865:
5863:
5843:
5837:
5836:
5834:
5832:
5823:. June 2, 1955.
5813:
5807:
5806:
5804:
5802:
5783:
5777:
5776:
5748:
5738:
5721:
5720:
5718:
5716:
5693:
5687:
5686:
5684:
5682:
5671:CarnegieHall.org
5663:
5657:
5656:
5654:
5652:
5632:
5626:
5625:
5607:
5598:
5597:
5595:
5593:
5574:
5568:
5567:
5551:
5545:
5544:
5528:
5522:
5521:
5519:
5517:
5498:
5492:
5491:
5475:
5469:
5468:
5466:
5464:
5441:
5435:
5434:
5418:
5412:
5411:
5395:
5389:
5388:
5386:
5384:
5369:
5363:
5362:
5360:
5358:
5339:
5333:
5332:
5316:
5310:
5309:
5307:
5305:
5286:
5280:
5279:
5263:
5257:
5256:
5254:
5252:
5237:
5228:
5227:
5225:
5223:
5208:
5199:
5193:
5184:
5183:
5181:
5179:
5159:
5153:
5152:
5150:
5148:
5129:
5123:
5122:
5120:
5118:
5103:
5097:
5096:
5094:
5092:
5073:
5067:
5066:
5055:New-York Tribune
5050:
5044:
5043:
5041:
5039:
5022:
5016:
5015:
5013:
5011:
4993:
4987:
4986:
4976:
4970:
4969:
4943:
4937:
4936:
4934:
4932:
4909:
4903:
4902:
4900:
4898:
4883:New-York Tribune
4875:
4869:
4868:
4852:
4846:
4840:
4829:
4828:
4817:New-York Tribune
4812:
4806:
4805:
4803:
4801:
4782:
4776:
4775:
4773:
4771:
4752:
4746:
4745:
4743:
4741:
4720:
4714:
4713:
4707:
4705:
4686:
4680:
4679:
4677:
4675:
4669:
4658:
4650:
4644:
4643:
4641:
4639:
4620:
4614:
4613:
4602:New-York Tribune
4597:
4591:
4590:
4588:
4586:
4565:
4559:
4558:
4556:
4554:
4548:
4537:
4529:
4523:
4522:
4511:New-York Tribune
4506:
4500:
4499:
4497:
4495:
4476:
4470:
4469:
4463:
4461:
4442:
4433:
4432:
4420:New-York Tribune
4414:
4408:
4407:
4405:
4403:
4397:
4386:
4378:
4365:
4359:
4350:
4344:
4333:
4332:
4306:
4297:
4296:
4294:
4292:
4273:
4267:
4261:
4255:
4249:
4238:
4237:
4235:
4233:
4227:
4216:
4207:
4196:
4195:
4193:
4191:
4176:
4170:
4169:
4167:
4165:
4143:
4137:
4136:
4134:
4132:
4110:
4104:
4103:
4101:
4099:
4081:
4070:
4069:
4067:
4065:
4050:
4044:
4043:
4024:
4011:
4005:
3992:
3991:
3989:
3987:
3971:
3962:
3956:
3947:
3946:
3930:
3917:
3916:
3914:
3912:
3894:
3881:
3880:
3878:
3876:
3857:Holland, Bernard
3853:
3838:
3837:
3835:
3833:
3810:
3799:
3798:
3796:
3794:
3775:
3769:
3768:
3766:
3764:
3745:Dunlap, David W.
3741:
3735:
3734:
3732:
3730:
3707:
3701:
3695:
3678:
3677:
3675:
3673:
3653:
3647:
3646:
3644:
3642:
3636:
3625:
3616:
3605:
3604:
3602:
3600:
3577:
3566:
3565:
3563:
3561:
3538:
3529:
3528:
3526:
3524:
3505:
3488:
3487:
3485:
3483:
3467:
3454:
3453:
3451:
3449:
3426:
3405:
3404:
3402:
3400:
3380:
3374:
3373:
3371:
3369:
3350:Dunlap, David W.
3346:
3331:
3330:
3328:
3326:
3310:
3297:
3291:
3276:
3275:
3273:
3271:
3256:
3250:
3249:
3247:
3245:
3225:
3219:
3213:
3188:
3187:
3185:
3183:
3161:
3152:
3151:
3149:
3147:
3141:
3130:
3122:
3113:
3112:
3110:
3108:
3089:
3083:
3082:
3080:
3078:
3063:
3057:
3051:
3032:
3031:
3025:
3023:
3008:"Men and Things"
3004:
2991:
2990:
2988:
2986:
2971:
2965:
2959:
2950:
2949:
2947:
2945:
2922:
2916:
2915:
2913:
2911:
2892:
2879:
2878:
2867:New-York Tribune
2862:
2851:
2850:
2848:
2846:
2826:
2817:
2816:
2800:
2771:
2770:
2759:New-York Tribune
2754:
2731:
2725:
2712:
2706:
2693:
2692:
2667:
2656:
2655:
2649:
2647:
2628:
2603:
2602:
2600:
2598:
2592:
2586:. May 10, 1966.
2581:
2573:
2562:
2561:
2559:
2557:
2546:carnegiehall.org
2538:
2532:
2531:
2520:New-York Tribune
2515:
2506:
2505:
2503:
2501:
2495:
2484:
2476:
2457:
2456:
2430:
2403:
2402:
2400:
2398:
2383:
2377:
2376:
2374:
2372:
2366:
2355:
2347:
2341:
2335:
2312:
2306:
2305:
2303:
2301:
2295:
2284:
2276:
2270:
2269:
2267:
2265:
2245:
2239:
2238:
2236:
2234:
2209:
2203:
2202:
2200:
2198:
2179:
2173:
2172:
2170:
2168:
2145:
2136:
2135:
2134:on June 7, 2011.
2124:
2118:
2117:
2115:
2113:
2090:
2088:
2086:
2063:
2057:
2056:
2041:
2032:
2031:
2014:
1997:
1988:
1982:
1981:
1978:
1977:
1974:
1971:
1968:
1965:
1962:
1959:
1945:
1876:Leopold Godowsky
1768:Juilliard School
1644:Paquito D'Rivera
1573:National Theatre
1545:Arturo Toscanini
1424:Herbert Muschamp
1412:2000s to present
1294:Luchino Visconti
1258:Reston, Virginia
1032:Leopold Damrosch
957:Other facilities
942:Sanford I. Weill
791:console brackets
641:
635:
629:
623:
618:, served by the
560:Russian Tea Room
452:
447:
446:
443:
442:
439:
436:
433:
430:
427:
424:
379:October 15, 1966
363:
352:
339:
321:
320:
318:
317:
316:
311:
307:
304:
303:
302:
299:
278:
223:carnegiehall.org
192:
190:
185:
167:Zankel Hall: 599
127:
121:
115:
109:
58:
51:
47:
43:
36:
21:
14504:
14503:
14499:
14498:
14497:
14495:
14494:
14493:
14429:Andrew Carnegie
14404:
14403:
14402:
14392:
14390:
14380:
14378:
14368:
14366:
14354:
14346:
14344:
14339:
14301:
14270:
14222:Above 110th St.
14156:
14150:
13821:
13815:
13809:
13808:
13804:
13799:
13758:
13749:
13719:
13714:
13683:Smaller islands
13644:
13606:Smaller islands
13567:
13564:
13534:
13529:
13513:
13509:Minnesota Strip
13485:
13466:
13447:Pershing Square
13407:Columbus Circle
13314:
13308:
13287:
13189:
13170:
13149:
13107:
13101:
13065:
13049:
12968:
12947:
12880:
12874:
12860:Shun Lee Palace
12652:
12642:
12623:
12599:Roosevelt Hotel
12569:Hotel Metropole
12564:Hotel Manhattan
12537:
12468:Park Lane Hotel
12458:Paramount Hotel
12433:Mansfield Hotel
12413:Lexington Hotel
12338:Algonquin Hotel
12322:
12303:
12299:Ziegfeld (1969)
12294:Ziegfeld (1927)
12192:
12148:The ImaginAsian
12121:
12077:Richard Rodgers
11977:Ethel Barrymore
11919:
11900:
11876:Temple Emanu-El
11834:
11770:Park Avenue Plz
11660:CBS Studio Bldg
11477:
11467:
11384:
11311:
11190:Hampshire House
11120:The Briarcliffe
10930:13–15 W 54th St
10890:1 Worldwide Plz
10882:
10872:
10861:
10848:
10843:
10813:
10808:
10764:Folk music club
10754:Performance art
10732:
10664:
10441:
10375:
10372:
10319:
10318:
10315:
10305:
10290:
10284:
10269:
10266:
10264:Further reading
10248:
10206:
10183:
10149:
10144:
10143:
10133:
10131:
10118:
10117:
10113:
10106:
10092:
10088:
10078:
10076:
10058:
10049:
10039:
10037:
10029:Washington Post
10020:
10007:
10000:
9986:
9982:
9972:
9970:
9955:
9948:
9938:
9936:
9918:
9911:
9901:
9899:
9884:
9873:
9859:
9855:
9845:
9843:
9830:
9829:
9825:
9815:
9813:
9806:
9790:
9786:
9776:
9774:
9767:
9751:
9747:
9737:
9735:
9722:
9715:
9705:
9703:
9693:
9689:
9679:
9677:
9664:
9663:
9659:
9649:
9647:
9634:
9633:
9629:
9619:
9617:
9608:
9607:
9603:
9593:
9591:
9590:. June 19, 1925
9582:
9581:
9577:
9567:
9565:
9564:. June 24, 1904
9556:
9555:
9551:
9541:
9539:
9526:
9525:
9521:
9511:
9509:
9496:
9495:
9491:
9481:
9479:
9469:
9465:
9455:
9453:
9444:
9443:
9439:
9429:
9427:
9409:
9405:
9395:
9393:
9391:
9375:
9371:
9361:
9359:
9357:
9341:
9337:
9327:
9325:
9323:
9307:
9303:
9293:
9291:
9290:on July 9, 2017
9278:
9277:
9273:
9263:
9261:
9254:ledzeppelin.com
9248:
9247:
9243:
9236:
9222:
9218:
9208:
9206:
9194:
9188:Wilson, John S.
9185:
9181:
9171:
9169:
9156:
9155:
9151:
9141:
9139:
9134:. May 7, 1955.
9127:
9123:
9122:
9118:
9108:
9106:
9099:
9083:
9079:
9069:
9067:
9066:. June 30, 1978
9058:
9057:
9053:
9043:
9041:
9031:Wilson, John S.
9028:
9024:
9014:
9012:
9002:Wilson, John S.
8999:
8995:
8985:
8983:
8974:
8973:
8969:
8959:
8957:
8948:
8947:
8943:
8933:
8931:
8922:
8921:
8917:
8907:
8905:
8895:
8891:
8881:
8879:
8869:
8865:
8855:
8853:
8844:
8843:
8839:
8829:
8827:
8815:
8811:
8801:
8799:
8788:
8784:
8773:
8769:
8761:
8757:
8747:
8745:
8735:Taubman, Howard
8732:
8728:
8718:
8716:
8704:
8700:
8690:
8688:
8678:Taubman, Howard
8675:
8671:
8652:
8650:
8637:
8633:
8623:
8621:
8611:
8607:
8597:
8595:
8585:
8578:
8576:
8566:
8562:
8552:
8550:
8537:
8536:
8532:
8522:
8520:
8507:
8506:
8502:
8492:
8490:
8475:
8471:
8461:
8459:
8446:
8445:
8438:
8428:
8426:
8409:
8405:
8395:
8393:
8378:
8374:
8364:
8362:
8353:
8352:
8345:
8335:
8333:
8318:
8309:
8299:
8297:
8282:
8278:
8268:
8266:
8253:
8252:
8248:
8238:
8236:
8218:
8214:
8204:
8202:
8192:
8188:
8178:
8176:
8166:
8162:
8152:
8150:
8137:
8133:
8123:
8121:
8104:
8100:
8090:
8088:
8077:"Arts, Briefly"
8070:
8066:
8056:
8054:
8039:
8035:
8025:
8023:
8005:
8001:
7991:
7989:
7971:
7967:
7957:
7955:
7940:
7939:
7935:
7925:
7923:
7910:
7909:
7902:
7892:
7890:
7872:
7868:
7858:
7856:
7838:
7834:
7824:
7822:
7805:
7801:
7791:
7789:
7771:
7767:
7757:
7755:
7738:
7734:
7724:
7722:
7707:
7703:
7693:
7691:
7678:
7677:
7673:
7663:
7661:
7643:
7639:
7629:
7627:
7612:
7608:
7598:
7596:
7579:
7575:
7554:
7550:
7540:
7538:
7523:
7519:
7509:
7507:
7489:
7482:
7472:
7470:
7452:
7448:
7438:
7436:
7423:
7419:
7409:
7407:
7389:
7385:
7375:
7373:
7355:
7351:
7341:
7339:
7326:
7325:
7321:
7311:
7309:
7300:
7299:
7295:
7285:
7283:
7268:
7264:
7254:
7252:
7234:
7230:
7220:
7218:
7213:. p. 199.
7203:
7199:
7189:
7187:
7182:. p. 157.
7172:
7168:
7158:
7156:
7151:. p. 103.
7141:
7137:
7127:
7125:
7108:
7104:
7094:
7092:
7077:
7073:
7063:
7061:
7046:
7042:
7032:
7030:
7017:
7016:
7012:
7002:
7000:
6982:
6978:
6968:
6966:
6961:. p. 118.
6949:
6945:
6935:
6933:
6932:. April 4, 1985
6924:
6923:
6919:
6909:
6907:
6894:
6887:
6877:
6875:
6862:
6853:
6843:
6841:
6823:
6816:
6806:
6804:
6789:
6785:
6775:
6773:
6758:
6754:
6744:
6742:
6737:. p. 117.
6725:
6718:
6708:
6706:
6693:. p. D27.
6683:
6679:
6669:
6667:
6654:
6653:
6649:
6639:
6637:
6622:
6618:
6608:
6606:
6588:
6581:
6571:
6569:
6559:
6552:
6542:
6540:
6525:
6521:
6513:
6509:
6499:
6497:
6484:
6477:
6467:
6465:
6452:
6448:
6438:
6436:
6418:
6414:
6396:
6395:
6391:
6381:
6379:
6361:
6357:
6347:
6345:
6330:
6326:
6316:
6314:
6299:
6298:
6294:
6284:
6282:
6269:
6268:
6264:
6254:
6252:
6247:
6246:
6242:
6232:
6230:
6220:
6216:
6206:
6204:
6186:
6171:
6161:
6159:
6144:
6140:
6130:
6128:
6110:
6106:
6087:
6083:
6073:
6071:
6058:
6057:
6053:
6034:
6030:
6012:
6011:
6007:
5997:
5995:
5977:
5973:
5963:
5961:
5957:
5946:
5942:
5941:
5937:
5927:
5925:
5910:
5909:
5905:
5895:
5893:
5878:
5871:
5861:
5859:
5844:
5840:
5830:
5828:
5815:
5814:
5810:
5800:
5798:
5785:
5784:
5780:
5757:
5739:
5724:
5714:
5712:
5697:Taubman, Howard
5694:
5690:
5680:
5678:
5665:
5664:
5660:
5650:
5648:
5633:
5629:
5608:
5601:
5591:
5589:
5584:. May 6, 1936.
5576:
5575:
5571:
5553:
5552:
5548:
5530:
5529:
5525:
5515:
5513:
5500:
5499:
5495:
5477:
5476:
5472:
5462:
5460:
5443:
5442:
5438:
5420:
5419:
5415:
5397:
5396:
5392:
5382:
5380:
5371:
5370:
5366:
5356:
5354:
5341:
5340:
5336:
5318:
5317:
5313:
5303:
5301:
5288:
5287:
5283:
5265:
5264:
5260:
5250:
5248:
5239:
5238:
5231:
5221:
5219:
5210:
5209:
5202:
5194:
5187:
5177:
5175:
5160:
5156:
5146:
5144:
5131:
5130:
5126:
5116:
5114:
5105:
5104:
5100:
5090:
5088:
5075:
5074:
5070:
5052:
5051:
5047:
5037:
5035:
5031:Chicago Tribune
5024:
5023:
5019:
5009:
5007:
4999:(May 5, 1991).
4994:
4990:
4982:New York Herald
4978:
4977:
4973:
4958:
4944:
4940:
4930:
4928:
4910:
4906:
4896:
4894:
4877:
4876:
4872:
4854:
4853:
4849:
4841:
4832:
4814:
4813:
4809:
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4797:
4784:
4783:
4779:
4769:
4767:
4754:
4753:
4749:
4739:
4737:
4722:
4721:
4717:
4703:
4701:
4688:
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4683:
4673:
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4667:
4656:
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4651:
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4637:
4635:
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4599:
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4584:
4582:
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4566:
4562:
4552:
4550:
4546:
4535:
4531:
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4526:
4508:
4507:
4503:
4493:
4491:
4478:
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4473:
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4457:
4444:
4443:
4436:
4416:
4415:
4411:
4401:
4399:
4395:
4384:
4380:
4379:
4368:
4360:
4353:
4345:
4336:
4321:
4307:
4300:
4290:
4288:
4275:
4274:
4270:
4262:
4258:
4250:
4241:
4231:
4229:
4225:
4214:
4208:
4199:
4189:
4187:
4177:
4173:
4163:
4161:
4144:
4140:
4130:
4128:
4111:
4107:
4097:
4095:
4082:
4073:
4063:
4061:
4051:
4047:
4025:
4014:
4006:
3995:
3985:
3983:
3974:Carnegie Hall.
3972:
3965:
3957:
3950:
3937:. p. C16.
3931:
3920:
3910:
3908:
3895:
3884:
3874:
3872:
3854:
3841:
3831:
3829:
3811:
3802:
3792:
3790:
3777:
3776:
3772:
3762:
3760:
3747:(May 5, 2002).
3742:
3738:
3728:
3726:
3711:Pogrebin, Robin
3708:
3704:
3696:
3681:
3671:
3669:
3662:Interior Design
3654:
3650:
3640:
3638:
3634:
3623:
3617:
3608:
3598:
3596:
3578:
3569:
3559:
3557:
3539:
3532:
3522:
3520:
3507:
3506:
3491:
3481:
3479:
3470:Carnegie Hall.
3468:
3457:
3447:
3445:
3427:
3408:
3398:
3396:
3381:
3377:
3367:
3365:
3347:
3334:
3324:
3322:
3313:Carnegie Hall.
3311:
3300:
3292:
3279:
3269:
3267:
3258:
3257:
3253:
3243:
3241:
3226:
3222:
3214:
3191:
3181:
3179:
3174:. p. 101.
3162:
3155:
3145:
3143:
3139:
3128:
3124:
3123:
3116:
3106:
3104:
3091:
3090:
3086:
3076:
3074:
3065:
3064:
3060:
3052:
3035:
3021:
3019:
3006:
3005:
2994:
2984:
2982:
2981:on July 9, 2017
2973:
2972:
2968:
2960:
2953:
2943:
2941:
2926:"Carnegie Hall"
2924:
2923:
2919:
2909:
2907:
2894:
2893:
2882:
2864:
2863:
2854:
2844:
2842:
2827:
2820:
2802:
2801:
2774:
2756:
2755:
2734:
2726:
2715:
2707:
2696:
2689:
2668:
2659:
2645:
2643:
2630:
2629:
2606:
2596:
2594:
2590:
2579:
2577:"Carnegie Hall"
2575:
2574:
2565:
2555:
2553:
2552:on May 28, 2016
2540:
2539:
2535:
2517:
2516:
2509:
2499:
2497:
2493:
2482:
2478:
2477:
2460:
2445:
2431:
2406:
2396:
2394:
2384:
2380:
2370:
2368:
2364:
2353:
2349:
2348:
2344:
2332:
2313:
2309:
2299:
2297:
2293:
2282:
2280:"Steinway Hall"
2278:
2277:
2273:
2263:
2261:
2246:
2242:
2232:
2230:
2211:
2210:
2206:
2196:
2194:
2181:
2180:
2176:
2166:
2164:
2147:
2146:
2139:
2126:
2125:
2121:
2111:
2109:
2092:
2084:
2082:
2065:
2064:
2060:
2045:"Carnegie Hall"
2043:
2042:
2035:
2016:
2015:
2011:
2006:
2001:
2000:
1986:
1956:
1952:
1949:Andrew Carnegie
1946:
1942:
1937:
1932:
1899:
1871:
1859:. According to
1845:Dizzy Gillespie
1811:
1806:
1797:
1788:Robert F. Smith
1780:Clive Gillinson
1776:
1740:
1662:and members of
1648:Arturo Sandoval
1612:Ella Fitzgerald
1608:Dizzy Gillespie
1604:Louis Armstrong
1569:
1543:, conducted by
1491:Richard Strauss
1480:
1475:
1465:
1429:Ronald Perelman
1414:
1396:, president of
1394:John L. Tishman
1386:
1373:Bernard Holland
1322:
1283:
1281:1960s and 1970s
1278:
1225:
1217:Kahn and Jacobs
1204:Robert E. Simon
1180:
1151:
1146:
1133:New York Herald
1124:Henry C. Potter
1072:
1048:Andrew Carnegie
1028:
1018:, supporting a
997:Bill Cunningham
959:
938:
895:
821:
816:
731:
699:William Tuthill
687:
637:
631:
625:
619:
588:The Briarcliffe
521:
497:Robert E. Simon
478:Andrew Carnegie
450:
421:
417:
314:
312:
308:
305:
300:
297:
295:
293:
292:
280:
266:
257:
248:
239:
211:Andrew Carnegie
201:William Tuthill
188:
186:
183:
182:April 1891
168:
166:
87:
82:
61:
44:
37:
30:
28:
23:
22:
15:
12:
11:
5:
14502:
14492:
14491:
14486:
14481:
14476:
14471:
14466:
14461:
14456:
14451:
14446:
14441:
14436:
14431:
14426:
14421:
14416:
14401:
14400:
14388:
14376:
14364:
14341:
14340:
14338:
14337:
14327:
14317:
14306:
14303:
14302:
14300:
14299:
14298:
14297:
14292:
14284:
14278:
14276:
14272:
14271:
14269:
14268:
14263:
14258:
14253:
14248:
14243:
14238:
14233:
14232:
14231:
14230:
14229:
14224:
14219:
14217:59th–110th St.
14214:
14209:
14207:Below 14th St.
14199:
14194:
14189:
14184:
14178:New York City
14176:
14171:
14166:
14160:
14158:
14152:
14151:
14149:
14148:
14143:
14138:
14137:
14136:
14131:
14121:
14116:
14111:
14106:
14101:
14096:
14091:
14086:
14081:
14076:
14071:
14066:
14061:
14056:
14051:
14046:
14041:
14036:
14031:
14026:
14021:
14016:
14011:
14006:
14001:
13996:
13991:
13986:
13981:
13976:
13971:
13966:
13961:
13956:
13951:
13946:
13941:
13936:
13931:
13926:
13921:
13916:
13911:
13906:
13901:
13896:
13891:
13886:
13881:
13876:
13871:
13866:
13861:
13856:
13851:
13846:
13841:
13836:
13831:
13825:
13823:
13817:
13816:
13802:
13800:
13798:
13797:
13795:Property types
13792:
13787:
13782:
13777:
13772:
13766:
13764:
13760:
13759:
13748:
13747:
13740:
13733:
13725:
13716:
13715:
13713:
13712:
13707:
13702:
13697:
13692:
13687:
13686:
13685:
13680:
13678:Above 110th St
13675:
13673:59th–110th Sts
13670:
13665:
13654:
13652:
13650:City Landmarks
13646:
13645:
13643:
13642:
13641:
13640:
13630:
13625:
13620:
13615:
13610:
13609:
13608:
13603:
13601:Above 110th St
13598:
13596:59th–110th Sts
13593:
13588:
13577:
13575:
13569:
13568:
13563:
13562:
13555:
13548:
13540:
13531:
13530:
13522:
13519:
13518:
13515:
13514:
13512:
13511:
13506:
13501:
13496:
13490:
13487:
13486:
13484:Related topics
13476:
13475:
13472:
13471:
13468:
13467:
13465:
13464:
13459:
13454:
13449:
13444:
13439:
13434:
13432:Madison Avenue
13429:
13424:
13419:
13414:
13409:
13404:
13399:
13394:
13389:
13384:
13379:
13374:
13369:
13364:
13359:
13354:
13349:
13344:
13342:Seventh Avenue
13339:
13334:
13329:
13324:
13318:
13316:
13310:
13309:
13307:
13306:
13301:
13295:
13293:
13289:
13288:
13286:
13285:
13280:
13275:
13270:
13265:
13260:
13255:
13250:
13245:
13240:
13235:
13230:
13225:
13220:
13218:Seventh Avenue
13215:
13210:
13204:
13202:
13191:
13190:
13188:Transportation
13180:
13179:
13176:
13175:
13172:
13171:
13169:
13168:
13166:Rehs Galleries
13163:
13157:
13155:
13151:
13150:
13148:
13147:
13142:
13137:
13132:
13127:
13122:
13117:
13111:
13109:
13103:
13102:
13100:
13099:
13094:
13092:Greenacre Park
13089:
13084:
13079:
13073:
13071:
13067:
13066:
13064:
13063:
13057:
13055:
13051:
13050:
13048:
13047:
13042:
13037:
13032:
13027:
13022:
13017:
13012:
13007:
13002:
12997:
12992:
12987:
12982:
12976:
12974:
12970:
12969:
12967:
12966:
12961:
12955:
12953:
12949:
12948:
12946:
12945:
12940:
12935:
12930:
12925:
12920:
12915:
12910:
12905:
12900:
12895:
12890:
12884:
12882:
12876:
12875:
12873:
12872:
12867:
12862:
12857:
12852:
12847:
12842:
12837:
12832:
12827:
12822:
12817:
12812:
12807:
12805:P. J. Clarke's
12802:
12797:
12792:
12787:
12782:
12777:
12772:
12767:
12762:
12757:
12752:
12747:
12742:
12737:
12732:
12727:
12722:
12717:
12712:
12707:
12702:
12697:
12692:
12687:
12682:
12677:
12672:
12667:
12662:
12656:
12654:
12644:
12643:
12633:
12632:
12629:
12628:
12625:
12624:
12622:
12621:
12616:
12611:
12606:
12601:
12596:
12591:
12586:
12581:
12576:
12571:
12566:
12561:
12559:Hotel Claridge
12556:
12551:
12545:
12543:
12539:
12538:
12536:
12535:
12530:
12525:
12520:
12515:
12510:
12505:
12503:Royalton Hotel
12500:
12495:
12490:
12485:
12480:
12475:
12470:
12465:
12460:
12455:
12450:
12445:
12440:
12435:
12430:
12425:
12420:
12418:Lombardy Hotel
12415:
12410:
12405:
12400:
12395:
12390:
12385:
12380:
12375:
12370:
12365:
12360:
12355:
12350:
12345:
12340:
12334:
12332:
12324:
12323:
12313:
12312:
12309:
12308:
12305:
12304:
12302:
12301:
12296:
12291:
12286:
12281:
12276:
12271:
12266:
12261:
12256:
12251:
12246:
12241:
12236:
12231:
12226:
12221:
12216:
12211:
12206:
12200:
12198:
12194:
12193:
12191:
12190:
12185:
12180:
12175:
12170:
12165:
12160:
12155:
12150:
12145:
12140:
12135:
12129:
12127:
12123:
12122:
12120:
12119:
12114:
12109:
12104:
12099:
12094:
12089:
12084:
12079:
12074:
12069:
12064:
12059:
12054:
12049:
12044:
12039:
12034:
12029:
12024:
12019:
12014:
12009:
12004:
11999:
11994:
11989:
11984:
11982:Eugene O'Neill
11979:
11974:
11969:
11964:
11959:
11954:
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11899:
11898:
11893:
11888:
11883:
11878:
11873:
11868:
11863:
11858:
11853:
11851:Hotel Marguery
11848:
11842:
11840:
11836:
11835:
11833:
11832:
11827:
11825:Villard Houses
11822:
11817:
11812:
11807:
11802:
11797:
11792:
11787:
11782:
11777:
11772:
11767:
11762:
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11622:
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11607:
11602:
11597:
11592:
11587:
11582:
11577:
11572:
11570:400 Madison Av
11567:
11562:
11560:383 Madison Av
11557:
11552:
11547:
11542:
11537:
11532:
11527:
11522:
11517:
11512:
11507:
11502:
11497:
11492:
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11485:One Vanderbilt
11481:
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11112:
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11097:
11095:Americas Tower
11092:
11087:
11082:
11077:
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11067:
11062:
11057:
11052:
11047:
11042:
11037:
11032:
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10977:
10972:
10967:
10962:
10957:
10952:
10947:
10942:
10937:
10932:
10927:
10922:
10917:
10912:
10907:
10902:
10900:5 Columbus Cir
10897:
10895:2 Columbus Cir
10892:
10886:
10884:
10874:
10873:
10863:
10862:
10853:
10850:
10849:
10842:
10841:
10834:
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10810:
10809:
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10776:
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10746:
10740:
10738:
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10730:
10725:
10720:
10715:
10709:
10708:
10703:
10698:
10693:
10688:
10683:
10678:
10676:Blue Man Group
10672:
10670:
10666:
10665:
10663:
10662:
10657:
10652:
10647:
10642:
10637:
10632:
10627:
10622:
10617:
10612:
10607:
10602:
10597:
10592:
10586:
10585:
10580:
10575:
10570:
10565:
10560:
10555:
10553:The Bitter End
10550:
10545:
10543:Soho Playhouse
10540:
10535:
10530:
10525:
10520:
10515:
10510:
10505:
10500:
10495:
10490:
10485:
10480:
10475:
10470:
10465:
10460:
10455:
10449:
10447:
10443:
10442:
10440:
10439:
10434:
10429:
10424:
10419:
10417:Apollo Theater
10414:
10409:
10404:
10399:
10394:
10392:Lincoln Center
10389:
10383:
10381:
10377:
10376:
10371:
10370:
10363:
10356:
10348:
10342:
10341:
10335:
10330:
10325:
10314:
10313:External links
10311:
10310:
10309:
10303:
10288:
10282:
10265:
10262:
10261:
10260:
10246:
10230:Tauranac, John
10226:
10204:
10187:
10181:
10166:
10148:
10145:
10142:
10141:
10111:
10104:
10086:
10047:
10005:
9998:
9980:
9946:
9909:
9871:
9853:
9823:
9804:
9784:
9765:
9745:
9713:
9687:
9657:
9627:
9616:. June 3, 1929
9601:
9575:
9549:
9519:
9489:
9463:
9437:
9403:
9389:
9369:
9355:
9335:
9321:
9301:
9271:
9241:
9234:
9216:
9179:
9149:
9116:
9097:
9077:
9051:
9022:
8993:
8967:
8941:
8915:
8889:
8863:
8837:
8809:
8782:
8767:
8755:
8726:
8698:
8669:
8631:
8605:
8560:
8530:
8500:
8469:
8436:
8403:
8372:
8343:
8307:
8276:
8246:
8212:
8186:
8160:
8131:
8098:
8064:
8033:
7999:
7965:
7933:
7900:
7866:
7832:
7799:
7765:
7750:. p. 15.
7732:
7701:
7671:
7637:
7622:. p. 31.
7606:
7591:. p. 60.
7573:
7562:. p. 14.
7548:
7517:
7480:
7446:
7417:
7383:
7358:Rockwell, John
7349:
7319:
7293:
7262:
7237:Rockwell, John
7228:
7197:
7166:
7135:
7120:. p. 21.
7102:
7071:
7040:
7010:
6985:Rockwell, John
6976:
6943:
6917:
6885:
6851:
6826:Rockwell, John
6814:
6799:. p. 94.
6783:
6752:
6716:
6677:
6647:
6632:. p. 65.
6616:
6601:. p. B3.
6579:
6550:
6519:
6507:
6487:Henahan, Donal
6475:
6446:
6412:
6397:"Film Notes".
6389:
6355:
6324:
6292:
6262:
6240:
6214:
6189:Rockwell, John
6169:
6138:
6104:
6093:. p. 19.
6081:
6051:
6040:. p. 12.
6028:
6005:
5971:
5935:
5903:
5869:
5838:
5808:
5778:
5755:
5722:
5688:
5658:
5627:
5599:
5569:
5546:
5523:
5493:
5470:
5436:
5413:
5390:
5364:
5334:
5311:
5281:
5258:
5229:
5218:. July 4, 1920
5200:
5185:
5154:
5124:
5098:
5068:
5045:
5017:
4988:
4971:
4956:
4938:
4904:
4870:
4855:"Amusements".
4847:
4845:, p. 731.
4830:
4807:
4777:
4747:
4715:
4681:
4645:
4615:
4592:
4560:
4524:
4501:
4471:
4434:
4409:
4366:
4364:, p. 144.
4351:
4334:
4319:
4298:
4268:
4256:
4239:
4221:. p. 75.
4197:
4171:
4138:
4105:
4071:
4045:
4012:
3993:
3963:
3948:
3918:
3882:
3839:
3814:Rockwell, John
3800:
3770:
3736:
3702:
3700:, p. 733.
3679:
3648:
3606:
3567:
3530:
3489:
3455:
3406:
3375:
3332:
3298:
3277:
3251:
3220:
3218:, p. 732.
3189:
3153:
3114:
3084:
3073:. May 21, 1962
3058:
3033:
2992:
2966:
2951:
2917:
2880:
2852:
2818:
2772:
2732:
2730:, p. 145.
2713:
2694:
2687:
2657:
2604:
2563:
2533:
2507:
2458:
2443:
2404:
2378:
2342:
2330:
2307:
2271:
2240:
2204:
2174:
2137:
2119:
2058:
2033:
2008:
2007:
2005:
2002:
1999:
1998:
1939:
1938:
1936:
1933:
1931:
1928:
1927:
1926:
1921:
1916:
1911:
1906:
1898:
1895:
1887:Fritz Kreisler
1870:
1867:
1843:and trumpeter
1825:Jascha Heifetz
1810:
1807:
1805:
1802:
1796:
1793:
1775:
1772:
1739:
1736:
1666:'s orchestra.
1664:Duke Ellington
1620:Billie Holiday
1616:Charlie Parker
1596:Duke Ellington
1568:
1565:
1487:Antonín Dvořák
1479:
1476:
1464:
1461:
1413:
1410:
1385:
1382:
1369:New York Times
1321:
1318:
1308:and his firm,
1282:
1279:
1277:
1274:
1233:Lincoln Center
1224:
1221:
1179:
1178:1920s to 1940s
1176:
1150:
1149:1890s to 1910s
1147:
1145:
1142:
1071:
1068:
1027:
1024:
993:Editta Sherman
980:Isadora Duncan
958:
955:
937:
934:
894:
891:
837:Lincoln Center
820:
817:
815:
812:
789:is carried on
730:
727:
686:
683:
525:Seventh Avenue
520:
517:
505:Lincoln Center
503:relocating to
462:Seventh Avenue
409:
408:
405:
404:
401:
397:
396:
393:
389:
388:
385:
381:
380:
377:
373:
372:
368:
367:
364:
357:
356:
353:
346:
345:
340:
333:
332:
327:
323:
322:
290:
286:
285:
282:
281:
271:
268:
267:
262:
259:
258:
253:
250:
249:
244:
241:
240:
237:
234:
233:
230:
229:
226:
225:
219:
218:
214:
213:
208:
204:
203:
198:
194:
193:
180:
176:
175:
171:
170:
163:
157:
156:
151:
147:
146:
143:
139:
138:
133:
129:
128:
94:
93:Public transit
90:
89:
75:Seventh Avenue
71:
67:
66:
63:
62:
59:
26:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
14501:
14490:
14487:
14485:
14482:
14480:
14477:
14475:
14472:
14470:
14467:
14465:
14462:
14460:
14457:
14455:
14452:
14450:
14447:
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14442:
14440:
14437:
14435:
14432:
14430:
14427:
14425:
14422:
14420:
14417:
14415:
14414:Carnegie Hall
14412:
14411:
14409:
14399:
14389:
14387:
14386:New York City
14377:
14375:
14365:
14363:
14358:
14353:
14352:
14349:
14336:
14332:
14328:
14326:
14318:
14316:
14308:
14307:
14304:
14296:
14293:
14291:
14290:New York City
14288:
14287:
14285:
14283:
14280:
14279:
14277:
14273:
14267:
14264:
14262:
14259:
14257:
14254:
14252:
14249:
14247:
14244:
14242:
14239:
14237:
14236:Niagara Falls
14234:
14228:
14227:Minor islands
14225:
14223:
14220:
14218:
14215:
14213:
14212:14th–59th St.
14210:
14208:
14205:
14204:
14203:
14200:
14198:
14197:Staten Island
14195:
14193:
14190:
14188:
14185:
14183:
14180:
14179:
14177:
14175:
14172:
14170:
14167:
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14153:
14147:
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14120:
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14115:
14112:
14110:
14107:
14105:
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14100:
14097:
14095:
14092:
14090:
14087:
14085:
14082:
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14077:
14075:
14072:
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14067:
14065:
14062:
14060:
14057:
14055:
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14047:
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14027:
14025:
14022:
14020:
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14015:
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14007:
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14000:
13997:
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13990:
13987:
13985:
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13907:
13905:
13902:
13900:
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13890:
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13842:
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13796:
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13727:
13726:
13723:
13711:
13708:
13706:
13703:
13701:
13700:Staten Island
13698:
13696:
13693:
13691:
13688:
13684:
13681:
13679:
13676:
13674:
13671:
13669:
13668:14th–59th Sts
13666:
13664:
13663:Below 14th St
13661:
13660:
13659:
13656:
13655:
13653:
13651:
13647:
13639:
13638:New York City
13636:
13635:
13634:
13631:
13629:
13626:
13624:
13623:Staten Island
13621:
13619:
13616:
13614:
13611:
13607:
13604:
13602:
13599:
13597:
13594:
13592:
13591:14th–59th Sts
13589:
13587:
13586:Below 14th St
13584:
13583:
13582:
13579:
13578:
13576:
13574:
13570:
13561:
13556:
13554:
13549:
13547:
13542:
13541:
13538:
13528:
13525:
13520:
13510:
13507:
13505:
13504:Midtown South
13502:
13500:
13499:Little Brazil
13497:
13495:
13492:
13491:
13488:
13481:
13477:
13463:
13460:
13458:
13455:
13453:
13452:Shubert Alley
13450:
13448:
13445:
13443:
13440:
13438:
13435:
13433:
13430:
13428:
13425:
13423:
13420:
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13415:
13413:
13410:
13408:
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13398:
13395:
13393:
13390:
13388:
13385:
13383:
13380:
13378:
13375:
13373:
13370:
13368:
13365:
13363:
13360:
13358:
13355:
13353:
13350:
13348:
13347:Eighth Avenue
13345:
13343:
13340:
13338:
13335:
13333:
13330:
13328:
13325:
13323:
13320:
13319:
13317:
13315:intersections
13311:
13305:
13302:
13300:
13297:
13296:
13294:
13290:
13284:
13281:
13279:
13276:
13274:
13271:
13269:
13266:
13264:
13261:
13259:
13256:
13254:
13251:
13249:
13246:
13244:
13241:
13239:
13236:
13234:
13231:
13229:
13226:
13224:
13221:
13219:
13216:
13214:
13211:
13209:
13206:
13205:
13203:
13200:
13196:
13192:
13185:
13181:
13167:
13164:
13162:
13159:
13158:
13156:
13154:Art galleries
13152:
13146:
13143:
13141:
13138:
13136:
13133:
13131:
13128:
13126:
13123:
13121:
13118:
13116:
13113:
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13104:
13098:
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13074:
13072:
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13059:
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13056:
13052:
13046:
13043:
13041:
13038:
13036:
13033:
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13028:
13026:
13023:
13021:
13018:
13016:
13013:
13011:
13008:
13006:
13003:
13001:
12998:
12996:
12993:
12991:
12988:
12986:
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12981:
12978:
12977:
12975:
12971:
12965:
12962:
12960:
12957:
12956:
12954:
12950:
12944:
12941:
12939:
12936:
12934:
12931:
12929:
12926:
12924:
12921:
12919:
12916:
12914:
12911:
12909:
12906:
12904:
12901:
12899:
12896:
12894:
12891:
12889:
12886:
12885:
12883:
12877:
12871:
12868:
12866:
12863:
12861:
12858:
12856:
12853:
12851:
12848:
12846:
12843:
12841:
12840:Rumpelmayer's
12838:
12836:
12833:
12831:
12828:
12826:
12823:
12821:
12818:
12816:
12813:
12811:
12808:
12806:
12803:
12801:
12798:
12796:
12793:
12791:
12788:
12786:
12783:
12781:
12778:
12776:
12773:
12771:
12770:Latin Quarter
12768:
12766:
12763:
12761:
12760:King Cole Bar
12758:
12756:
12753:
12751:
12748:
12746:
12745:La Grenouille
12743:
12741:
12738:
12736:
12733:
12731:
12728:
12726:
12723:
12721:
12718:
12716:
12713:
12711:
12708:
12706:
12703:
12701:
12698:
12696:
12695:Cafe Chambord
12693:
12691:
12688:
12686:
12685:Burger Heaven
12683:
12681:
12678:
12676:
12673:
12671:
12668:
12666:
12663:
12661:
12658:
12657:
12655:
12649:
12645:
12638:
12634:
12620:
12619:Windsor Hotel
12617:
12615:
12612:
12610:
12607:
12605:
12602:
12600:
12597:
12595:
12592:
12590:
12587:
12585:
12582:
12580:
12577:
12575:
12572:
12570:
12567:
12565:
12562:
12560:
12557:
12555:
12552:
12550:
12547:
12546:
12544:
12540:
12534:
12531:
12529:
12526:
12524:
12521:
12519:
12516:
12514:
12511:
12509:
12506:
12504:
12501:
12499:
12498:Row NYC Hotel
12496:
12494:
12491:
12489:
12486:
12484:
12481:
12479:
12476:
12474:
12471:
12469:
12466:
12464:
12461:
12459:
12456:
12454:
12451:
12449:
12446:
12444:
12441:
12439:
12436:
12434:
12431:
12429:
12426:
12424:
12421:
12419:
12416:
12414:
12411:
12409:
12406:
12404:
12401:
12399:
12396:
12394:
12391:
12389:
12386:
12384:
12381:
12379:
12376:
12374:
12371:
12369:
12366:
12364:
12361:
12359:
12356:
12354:
12351:
12349:
12346:
12344:
12341:
12339:
12336:
12335:
12333:
12329:
12325:
12318:
12314:
12300:
12297:
12295:
12292:
12290:
12287:
12285:
12282:
12280:
12277:
12275:
12272:
12270:
12267:
12265:
12262:
12260:
12257:
12255:
12252:
12250:
12247:
12245:
12242:
12240:
12237:
12235:
12232:
12230:
12227:
12225:
12222:
12220:
12217:
12215:
12212:
12210:
12207:
12205:
12202:
12201:
12199:
12195:
12189:
12186:
12184:
12183:The Town Hall
12181:
12179:
12176:
12174:
12171:
12169:
12166:
12164:
12163:Paris Theater
12161:
12159:
12156:
12154:
12151:
12149:
12146:
12144:
12141:
12139:
12138:Carnegie Hall
12136:
12134:
12131:
12130:
12128:
12124:
12118:
12117:Winter Garden
12115:
12113:
12110:
12108:
12105:
12103:
12100:
12098:
12095:
12093:
12090:
12088:
12085:
12083:
12080:
12078:
12075:
12073:
12070:
12068:
12065:
12063:
12060:
12058:
12055:
12053:
12050:
12048:
12045:
12043:
12040:
12038:
12035:
12033:
12032:Lunt-Fontanne
12030:
12028:
12025:
12023:
12020:
12018:
12015:
12013:
12010:
12008:
12005:
12003:
12000:
11998:
11995:
11993:
11990:
11988:
11985:
11983:
11980:
11978:
11975:
11973:
11970:
11968:
11965:
11963:
11960:
11958:
11955:
11953:
11950:
11948:
11945:
11943:
11942:August Wilson
11940:
11938:
11935:
11934:
11932:
11930:
11926:
11922:
11915:
11911:
11897:
11894:
11892:
11889:
11887:
11884:
11882:
11879:
11877:
11874:
11872:
11869:
11867:
11864:
11862:
11859:
11857:
11854:
11852:
11849:
11847:
11844:
11843:
11841:
11837:
11831:
11828:
11826:
11823:
11821:
11818:
11816:
11813:
11811:
11808:
11806:
11803:
11801:
11798:
11796:
11793:
11791:
11788:
11786:
11783:
11781:
11778:
11776:
11773:
11771:
11768:
11766:
11765:Olympic Tower
11763:
11761:
11758:
11756:
11753:
11751:
11748:
11746:
11743:
11741:
11740:Lipstick Bldg
11738:
11736:
11733:
11731:
11730:Helmsley Bldg
11728:
11726:
11723:
11721:
11718:
11716:
11713:
11711:
11708:
11706:
11703:
11701:
11698:
11696:
11693:
11691:
11688:
11686:
11685:Citigroup Ctr
11683:
11681:
11678:
11676:
11675:Chrysler Bldg
11673:
11671:
11668:
11666:
11663:
11661:
11658:
11656:
11653:
11651:
11648:
11646:
11643:
11641:
11638:
11636:
11633:
11631:
11628:
11626:
11623:
11621:
11618:
11616:
11613:
11611:
11608:
11606:
11603:
11601:
11598:
11596:
11593:
11591:
11588:
11586:
11583:
11581:
11578:
11576:
11573:
11571:
11568:
11566:
11563:
11561:
11558:
11556:
11553:
11551:
11548:
11546:
11543:
11541:
11538:
11536:
11533:
11531:
11530:252 E 57th St
11528:
11526:
11523:
11521:
11520:138 E 50th St
11518:
11516:
11513:
11511:
11508:
11506:
11503:
11501:
11498:
11496:
11493:
11491:
11488:
11486:
11483:
11482:
11480:
11474:
11464:
11461:
11459:
11458:1585 Broadway
11456:
11454:
11453:1552 Broadway
11451:
11449:
11448:1540 Broadway
11446:
11444:
11443:1501 Broadway
11441:
11439:
11438:1500 Broadway
11436:
11434:
11433:255 W 43rd St
11431:
11429:
11428:229 W 43rd St
11426:
11424:
11421:
11419:
11416:
11414:
11411:
11409:
11406:
11404:
11401:
11399:
11396:
11395:
11393:
11391:
11387:
11381:
11378:
11376:
11373:
11371:
11368:
11366:
11363:
11361:
11358:
11356:
11353:
11351:
11348:
11346:
11343:
11341:
11338:
11336:
11333:
11331:
11328:
11326:
11323:
11322:
11320:
11318:
11314:
11308:
11305:
11303:
11300:
11298:
11295:
11293:
11290:
11288:
11285:
11283:
11280:
11278:
11275:
11273:
11270:
11268:
11267:Rodin Studios
11265:
11263:
11260:
11258:
11255:
11253:
11250:
11248:
11245:
11243:
11242:Paramount Plz
11240:
11238:
11235:
11233:
11230:
11228:
11225:
11223:
11220:
11218:
11215:
11211:
11208:
11207:
11206:
11203:
11201:
11198:
11196:
11193:
11191:
11188:
11186:
11183:
11181:
11178:
11176:
11175:Executive Plz
11173:
11171:
11168:
11166:
11163:
11161:
11158:
11156:
11153:
11151:
11148:
11146:
11143:
11141:
11138:
11136:
11133:
11131:
11128:
11126:
11123:
11121:
11118:
11116:
11113:
11111:
11108:
11106:
11103:
11101:
11098:
11096:
11093:
11091:
11088:
11086:
11083:
11081:
11080:1740 Broadway
11078:
11076:
11075:1717 Broadway
11073:
11071:
11068:
11066:
11063:
11061:
11058:
11056:
11053:
11051:
11048:
11046:
11043:
11041:
11038:
11036:
11033:
11031:
11028:
11026:
11023:
11021:
11018:
11016:
11013:
11011:
11008:
11006:
11003:
11001:
11000:224 W 57th St
10998:
10996:
10993:
10991:
10990:218 W 57th St
10988:
10986:
10983:
10981:
10980:165 W 57th St
10978:
10976:
10975:140 W 57th St
10973:
10971:
10970:130 W 57th St
10968:
10966:
10965:125 W 55th St
10963:
10961:
10960:120 W 46th St
10958:
10956:
10955:111 W 57th St
10953:
10951:
10948:
10946:
10943:
10941:
10938:
10936:
10933:
10931:
10928:
10926:
10923:
10921:
10918:
10916:
10913:
10911:
10908:
10906:
10903:
10901:
10898:
10896:
10893:
10891:
10888:
10887:
10885:
10879:
10875:
10868:
10864:
10860:
10859:New York City
10856:
10851:
10847:
10840:
10835:
10833:
10828:
10826:
10821:
10820:
10817:
10805:
10802:
10800:
10797:
10795:
10792:
10790:
10787:
10785:
10782:
10780:
10777:
10775:
10772:
10770:
10767:
10765:
10762:
10760:
10757:
10755:
10752:
10750:
10747:
10745:
10742:
10741:
10739:
10735:
10729:
10726:
10724:
10723:Noo Yawk Tawk
10721:
10719:
10716:
10714:
10711:
10710:
10707:
10704:
10702:
10701:The Civilians
10699:
10697:
10694:
10692:
10689:
10687:
10684:
10682:
10679:
10677:
10674:
10673:
10671:
10667:
10661:
10658:
10656:
10653:
10651:
10648:
10646:
10643:
10641:
10638:
10636:
10633:
10631:
10628:
10626:
10623:
10621:
10618:
10616:
10613:
10611:
10608:
10606:
10605:Cafe Au Go Go
10603:
10601:
10598:
10596:
10593:
10591:
10588:
10587:
10584:
10581:
10579:
10576:
10574:
10571:
10569:
10566:
10564:
10561:
10559:
10556:
10554:
10551:
10549:
10546:
10544:
10541:
10539:
10536:
10534:
10531:
10529:
10526:
10524:
10521:
10519:
10516:
10514:
10511:
10509:
10508:Bluestockings
10506:
10504:
10501:
10499:
10496:
10494:
10491:
10489:
10486:
10484:
10481:
10479:
10476:
10474:
10471:
10469:
10466:
10464:
10461:
10459:
10456:
10454:
10451:
10450:
10448:
10444:
10438:
10437:Castle Garden
10435:
10433:
10430:
10428:
10425:
10423:
10420:
10418:
10415:
10413:
10410:
10408:
10405:
10403:
10400:
10398:
10397:Carnegie Hall
10395:
10393:
10390:
10388:
10385:
10384:
10382:
10378:
10369:
10364:
10362:
10357:
10355:
10350:
10349:
10346:
10339:
10336:
10334:
10331:
10329:
10326:
10322:
10317:
10316:
10306:
10300:
10296:
10295:
10289:
10285:
10279:
10275:
10274:
10268:
10267:
10257:
10253:
10249:
10243:
10238:
10237:
10231:
10227:
10223:
10219:
10215:
10211:
10207:
10201:
10196:
10195:
10188:
10184:
10178:
10174:
10173:
10167:
10163:
10159:
10155:
10151:
10150:
10129:
10125:
10121:
10115:
10107:
10101:
10097:
10090:
10074:
10070:
10066:
10062:
10056:
10054:
10052:
10035:
10031:
10030:
10025:
10018:
10016:
10014:
10012:
10010:
10001:
9995:
9991:
9984:
9968:
9964:
9960:
9953:
9951:
9934:
9930:
9929:The Big Apple
9926:
9922:
9916:
9914:
9897:
9893:
9892:Carnegie Hall
9889:
9882:
9880:
9878:
9876:
9867:
9863:
9862:Cerf, Bennett
9857:
9841:
9837:
9836:Carnegie Hall
9833:
9827:
9811:
9807:
9801:
9797:
9796:
9788:
9772:
9768:
9762:
9758:
9757:
9749:
9734:
9733:Carnegie Hall
9730:
9726:
9720:
9718:
9702:
9698:
9691:
9675:
9671:
9670:Carnegie Hall
9667:
9661:
9645:
9641:
9637:
9631:
9620:September 28,
9615:
9611:
9605:
9594:September 28,
9589:
9585:
9579:
9568:September 28,
9563:
9559:
9553:
9537:
9533:
9529:
9523:
9507:
9503:
9499:
9493:
9478:
9474:
9467:
9451:
9447:
9441:
9425:
9421:
9417:
9413:
9407:
9392:
9386:
9382:
9381:
9373:
9358:
9352:
9348:
9347:
9339:
9324:
9318:
9314:
9313:
9305:
9289:
9285:
9281:
9275:
9259:
9255:
9251:
9245:
9237:
9231:
9227:
9220:
9204:
9200:
9193:
9189:
9183:
9167:
9163:
9159:
9153:
9137:
9133:
9126:
9120:
9104:
9100:
9094:
9090:
9089:
9081:
9065:
9061:
9055:
9040:
9036:
9032:
9026:
9011:
9007:
9003:
8997:
8981:
8977:
8971:
8955:
8951:
8945:
8929:
8925:
8919:
8904:
8900:
8893:
8878:
8874:
8867:
8851:
8847:
8841:
8826:
8825:
8820:
8813:
8797:
8793:
8786:
8778:
8771:
8765:, p. 21.
8764:
8759:
8744:
8740:
8736:
8730:
8715:
8714:
8709:
8702:
8687:
8683:
8679:
8673:
8666:
8662:
8649:
8645:
8641:
8635:
8620:
8616:
8609:
8594:
8590:
8575:
8571:
8564:
8548:
8544:
8540:
8534:
8518:
8514:
8513:ABC7 New York
8510:
8504:
8488:
8484:
8480:
8473:
8457:
8453:
8449:
8443:
8441:
8423:
8418:
8414:
8407:
8391:
8387:
8383:
8376:
8360:
8356:
8350:
8348:
8331:
8327:
8323:
8316:
8314:
8312:
8295:
8291:
8287:
8280:
8264:
8260:
8256:
8250:
8234:
8230:
8226:
8222:
8216:
8201:
8197:
8190:
8175:
8171:
8164:
8148:
8147:
8142:
8135:
8119:
8115:
8114:
8109:
8102:
8086:
8082:
8078:
8074:
8068:
8052:
8048:
8044:
8037:
8021:
8017:
8013:
8009:
8003:
7987:
7983:
7979:
7975:
7974:Kozinn, Allan
7969:
7953:
7949:
7948:
7943:
7937:
7921:
7917:
7913:
7907:
7905:
7888:
7884:
7880:
7876:
7870:
7854:
7850:
7846:
7842:
7836:
7820:
7817:. p. 8.
7816:
7815:
7810:
7803:
7787:
7783:
7779:
7775:
7774:Kozinn, Allan
7769:
7753:
7749:
7748:
7743:
7736:
7720:
7716:
7712:
7705:
7689:
7685:
7684:Carnegie Hall
7681:
7675:
7659:
7655:
7651:
7647:
7646:Kozinn, Allan
7641:
7625:
7621:
7617:
7610:
7594:
7590:
7589:
7584:
7577:
7569:
7565:
7561:
7560:
7552:
7536:
7532:
7528:
7521:
7505:
7501:
7497:
7493:
7492:Kozinn, Allan
7487:
7485:
7468:
7464:
7460:
7456:
7455:Kozinn, Allan
7450:
7439:September 28,
7435:
7431:
7427:
7421:
7405:
7401:
7397:
7393:
7387:
7371:
7367:
7363:
7359:
7353:
7337:
7333:
7329:
7323:
7307:
7303:
7297:
7281:
7278:. p. 4.
7277:
7273:
7266:
7250:
7246:
7242:
7238:
7232:
7216:
7212:
7208:
7201:
7185:
7181:
7177:
7170:
7154:
7150:
7146:
7139:
7123:
7119:
7118:
7113:
7106:
7090:
7086:
7082:
7075:
7059:
7055:
7051:
7044:
7028:
7024:
7020:
7014:
6998:
6994:
6990:
6986:
6980:
6964:
6960:
6959:
6954:
6947:
6936:September 28,
6931:
6927:
6921:
6910:September 28,
6906:. p. 123
6905:
6904:
6899:
6892:
6890:
6878:September 28,
6873:
6872:
6867:
6860:
6858:
6856:
6839:
6835:
6831:
6827:
6821:
6819:
6802:
6798:
6794:
6787:
6771:
6767:
6763:
6756:
6740:
6736:
6735:
6730:
6723:
6721:
6704:
6700:
6696:
6692:
6688:
6681:
6665:
6661:
6657:
6651:
6635:
6631:
6627:
6620:
6604:
6600:
6596:
6592:
6586:
6584:
6572:September 28,
6568:
6564:
6557:
6555:
6538:
6534:
6530:
6523:
6516:
6511:
6500:September 28,
6496:
6492:
6488:
6482:
6480:
6468:September 28,
6464:
6460:
6456:
6450:
6434:
6430:
6426:
6422:
6416:
6408:
6404:
6400:
6393:
6377:
6373:
6369:
6365:
6364:Hughes, Allen
6359:
6343:
6339:
6335:
6328:
6312:
6308:
6307:
6302:
6296:
6280:
6276:
6272:
6266:
6250:
6244:
6229:
6225:
6218:
6202:
6198:
6194:
6190:
6184:
6182:
6180:
6178:
6176:
6174:
6157:
6153:
6149:
6142:
6126:
6122:
6118:
6114:
6108:
6100:
6096:
6092:
6085:
6069:
6065:
6061:
6055:
6047:
6043:
6039:
6032:
6024:
6020:
6016:
6009:
5993:
5989:
5985:
5981:
5975:
5956:
5952:
5945:
5939:
5928:September 23,
5923:
5919:
5918:
5913:
5907:
5891:
5887:
5883:
5876:
5874:
5857:
5853:
5849:
5842:
5826:
5822:
5818:
5812:
5796:
5792:
5788:
5782:
5774:
5770:
5766:
5762:
5758:
5756:1-885254-02-4
5752:
5747:
5746:
5737:
5735:
5733:
5731:
5729:
5727:
5710:
5706:
5702:
5698:
5692:
5681:September 25,
5676:
5672:
5668:
5662:
5651:September 25,
5646:
5642:
5638:
5631:
5623:
5619:
5618:
5613:
5606:
5604:
5587:
5583:
5579:
5573:
5565:
5561:
5557:
5550:
5542:
5538:
5534:
5527:
5511:
5507:
5503:
5497:
5489:
5485:
5481:
5474:
5458:
5454:
5450:
5448:
5440:
5432:
5428:
5424:
5417:
5409:
5405:
5401:
5394:
5383:September 28,
5378:
5374:
5368:
5352:
5348:
5344:
5338:
5330:
5326:
5322:
5315:
5299:
5295:
5291:
5285:
5277:
5273:
5269:
5262:
5251:September 28,
5246:
5242:
5236:
5234:
5222:September 28,
5217:
5213:
5207:
5205:
5197:
5192:
5190:
5173:
5169:
5165:
5158:
5142:
5138:
5134:
5128:
5117:September 28,
5112:
5108:
5102:
5086:
5082:
5078:
5072:
5064:
5060:
5056:
5049:
5038:September 28,
5033:
5032:
5027:
5021:
5010:September 28,
5006:
5002:
4998:
4992:
4984:
4983:
4975:
4967:
4963:
4959:
4953:
4949:
4942:
4926:
4922:
4918:
4914:
4908:
4892:
4888:
4884:
4880:
4874:
4866:
4862:
4858:
4851:
4844:
4839:
4837:
4835:
4826:
4822:
4818:
4811:
4795:
4791:
4787:
4781:
4765:
4761:
4757:
4751:
4735:
4731:
4730:
4725:
4719:
4711:
4699:
4695:
4691:
4690:"A Busy Life"
4685:
4666:
4662:
4655:
4649:
4633:
4629:
4625:
4619:
4611:
4607:
4603:
4596:
4580:
4576:
4575:
4570:
4564:
4545:
4541:
4534:
4528:
4520:
4516:
4512:
4505:
4489:
4485:
4481:
4475:
4467:
4455:
4451:
4447:
4441:
4439:
4430:
4426:
4422:
4421:
4413:
4394:
4390:
4383:
4377:
4375:
4373:
4371:
4363:
4362:Tauranac 1985
4358:
4356:
4349:, p. 17.
4348:
4343:
4341:
4339:
4330:
4326:
4322:
4316:
4312:
4305:
4303:
4286:
4282:
4278:
4272:
4265:
4264:Tauranac 1985
4260:
4253:
4248:
4246:
4244:
4224:
4220:
4213:
4206:
4204:
4202:
4190:September 28,
4186:
4182:
4175:
4159:
4155:
4154:
4149:
4142:
4126:
4122:
4121:
4116:
4109:
4098:September 28,
4094:. p. 184
4093:
4092:
4087:
4080:
4078:
4076:
4064:September 28,
4060:
4056:
4049:
4041:
4037:
4034:. p. 1.
4033:
4032:
4023:
4021:
4019:
4017:
4009:
4004:
4002:
4000:
3998:
3981:
3977:
3970:
3968:
3960:
3955:
3953:
3944:
3940:
3936:
3929:
3927:
3925:
3923:
3911:September 28,
3907:. p. 137
3906:
3905:
3900:
3893:
3891:
3889:
3887:
3875:September 28,
3870:
3866:
3862:
3858:
3852:
3850:
3848:
3846:
3844:
3827:
3823:
3819:
3815:
3809:
3807:
3805:
3788:
3784:
3783:Carnegie Hall
3780:
3774:
3758:
3754:
3750:
3746:
3740:
3724:
3720:
3716:
3712:
3706:
3699:
3694:
3692:
3690:
3688:
3686:
3684:
3667:
3663:
3659:
3652:
3633:
3629:
3622:
3615:
3613:
3611:
3594:
3590:
3586:
3582:
3581:Kozinn, Allan
3576:
3574:
3572:
3555:
3551:
3547:
3543:
3537:
3535:
3518:
3514:
3510:
3504:
3502:
3500:
3498:
3496:
3494:
3477:
3473:
3466:
3464:
3462:
3460:
3443:
3439:
3435:
3431:
3425:
3423:
3421:
3419:
3417:
3415:
3413:
3411:
3394:
3390:
3386:
3379:
3363:
3359:
3355:
3351:
3345:
3343:
3341:
3339:
3337:
3320:
3316:
3309:
3307:
3305:
3303:
3296:, p. 20.
3295:
3290:
3288:
3286:
3284:
3282:
3265:
3261:
3255:
3239:
3235:
3231:
3224:
3217:
3212:
3210:
3208:
3206:
3204:
3202:
3200:
3198:
3196:
3194:
3177:
3173:
3172:
3167:
3160:
3158:
3138:
3134:
3127:
3121:
3119:
3102:
3098:
3097:Carnegie Hall
3094:
3088:
3072:
3068:
3062:
3056:, p. 19.
3055:
3050:
3048:
3046:
3044:
3042:
3040:
3038:
3029:
3017:
3013:
3009:
3003:
3001:
2999:
2997:
2980:
2976:
2970:
2964:, p. 18.
2963:
2958:
2956:
2939:
2935:
2931:
2927:
2921:
2905:
2901:
2897:
2891:
2889:
2887:
2885:
2876:
2872:
2868:
2861:
2859:
2857:
2840:
2836:
2832:
2825:
2823:
2814:
2810:
2806:
2799:
2797:
2795:
2793:
2791:
2789:
2787:
2785:
2783:
2781:
2779:
2777:
2768:
2764:
2760:
2753:
2751:
2749:
2747:
2745:
2743:
2741:
2739:
2737:
2729:
2728:Tauranac 1985
2724:
2722:
2720:
2718:
2710:
2705:
2703:
2701:
2699:
2690:
2684:
2680:
2676:
2672:
2666:
2664:
2662:
2653:
2641:
2637:
2633:
2627:
2625:
2623:
2621:
2619:
2617:
2615:
2613:
2611:
2609:
2589:
2585:
2578:
2572:
2570:
2568:
2551:
2547:
2543:
2537:
2529:
2525:
2521:
2514:
2512:
2492:
2488:
2481:
2475:
2473:
2471:
2469:
2467:
2465:
2463:
2454:
2450:
2446:
2440:
2436:
2429:
2427:
2425:
2423:
2421:
2419:
2417:
2415:
2413:
2411:
2409:
2393:
2389:
2382:
2363:
2359:
2352:
2346:
2339:
2333:
2327:
2323:
2322:
2317:
2311:
2292:
2288:
2281:
2275:
2259:
2255:
2251:
2244:
2233:September 13,
2228:
2224:
2220:
2219:
2214:
2208:
2192:
2188:
2184:
2178:
2162:
2158:
2154:
2150:
2144:
2142:
2133:
2129:
2123:
2107:
2103:
2099:
2097:
2096:Carnegie Hall
2080:
2076:
2072:
2070:
2069:Carnegie Hall
2062:
2054:
2050:
2046:
2040:
2038:
2029:
2025:
2024:
2019:
2013:
2009:
1995:
1991:
1990:
1980:
1950:
1944:
1940:
1925:
1922:
1920:
1917:
1915:
1912:
1910:
1907:
1904:
1901:
1900:
1894:
1892:
1888:
1884:
1879:
1877:
1866:
1864:
1863:
1858:
1857:framing story
1854:
1850:
1846:
1842:
1838:
1834:
1830:
1826:
1822:
1815:
1801:
1792:
1789:
1785:
1781:
1771:
1769:
1765:
1761:
1757:
1753:
1749:
1744:
1735:
1733:
1729:
1724:
1722:
1721:
1716:
1712:
1708:
1704:
1700:
1696:
1692:
1688:
1684:
1680:
1679:Sid Bernstein
1676:
1672:
1667:
1665:
1661:
1657:
1653:
1652:Chucho Valdés
1649:
1645:
1641:
1637:
1633:
1629:
1625:
1621:
1617:
1613:
1609:
1605:
1601:
1597:
1593:
1589:
1588:Benny Goodman
1585:
1580:
1578:
1574:
1564:
1562:
1558:
1554:
1550:
1546:
1542:
1537:
1535:
1531:
1526:
1524:
1520:
1516:
1512:
1508:
1504:
1500:
1496:
1492:
1488:
1484:
1474:
1470:
1460:
1458:
1454:
1449:
1447:
1442:
1438:
1432:
1430:
1425:
1420:
1409:
1407:
1401:
1399:
1395:
1390:
1381:
1379:
1374:
1371:music critic
1370:
1366:
1362:
1361:Frank Sinatra
1358:
1353:
1349:
1347:
1343:
1334:
1330:
1326:
1317:
1315:
1311:
1307:
1301:
1297:
1295:
1291:
1290:
1273:
1271:
1267:
1261:
1259:
1255:
1250:
1245:
1243:
1237:
1234:
1230:
1220:
1218:
1214:
1213:
1212:Carnegie Hall
1207:
1205:
1199:
1197:
1193:
1192:porte-cochère
1184:
1175:
1171:
1167:
1164:
1155:
1141:
1139:
1135:
1134:
1129:
1125:
1121:
1117:
1111:
1108:
1103:
1097:
1095:
1094:capital stock
1091:
1086:
1076:
1067:
1065:
1064:Herald Square
1061:
1057:
1053:
1049:
1045:
1041:
1037:
1033:
1023:
1021:
1017:
1013:
1009:
1005:
1000:
998:
994:
989:
988:Norman Mailer
985:
984:Martha Graham
981:
977:
971:
967:
964:
954:
951:
945:
943:
933:
930:
926:
922:
916:
913:
907:
905:
901:
890:
886:
878:
874:
871:
867:
864:, as well as
863:
859:
854:
850:
847:, containing
846:
840:
838:
834:
830:
826:
811:
809:
803:
800:
796:
792:
788:
783:
780:
776:
772:
768:
759:
755:
753:
749:
745:
741:
737:
726:
722:
720:
716:
715:bearing walls
712:
711:Dankmar Adler
708:
704:
700:
691:
682:
680:
676:
672:
668:
664:
660:
656:
652:
648:
643:
642: trains.
640:
634:
630:,
628:
624:,
622:
617:
613:
609:
605:
601:
597:
593:
589:
585:
582:to the west;
581:
577:
576:Rodin Studios
573:
569:
565:
561:
557:
553:
548:
546:
542:
538:
534:
530:
526:
516:
514:
510:
506:
502:
498:
494:
490:
485:
481:
479:
475:
471:
467:
463:
459:
455:
454:
445:
415:
414:Carnegie Hall
406:
403:June 20, 1967
402:
398:
395:June 23, 1980
394:
390:
386:
382:
378:
376:Added to NRHP
374:
369:
365:
358:
354:
347:
344:
341:
334:
331:
328:
324:
319:
291:
287:
283:
274:
269:
265:
260:
256:
251:
247:
242:
238:Carnegie Hall
235:
231:
227:
224:
220:
215:
212:
209:
205:
202:
199:
195:
181:
177:
172:
164:
162:
158:
155:
152:
148:
144:
140:
137:
134:
130:
126:
120:
114:
108:
104:
101:
99:
95:
91:
88:United States
85:
80:
76:
72:
68:
64:
57:
52:
49:Carnegie Hall
46:
41:
34:
33:Carnegie Hill
19:
14362:Architecture
14246:Poughkeepsie
14174:New Rochelle
14074:St. Lawrence
13523:
13457:Times Square
13412:Duffy Square
13332:Sixth Avenue
13327:Fifth Avenue
13322:Third Avenue
13108:institutions
13082:Central Park
13070:Green spaces
12870:The Campbell
12830:Rainbow Room
12820:Prime Burger
12755:Le Jardinier
12710:Caviar Russe
12705:La Caravelle
12690:Le Bernardin
12651:Restaurants/
12614:Weylin Hotel
12554:Hotel Carter
12388:Hotel Gerard
12383:Hotel Elysée
12378:Hotel Edison
12284:Times Square
12254:Loew's State
12229:Earl Carroll
12188:York Theatre
12137:
12126:Other venues
11805:Seagram Bldg
11750:MetLife Bldg
11725:Graybar Bldg
11655:Cartier Bldg
11510:19 E 54th St
11505:18 E 50th St
11500:12 E 53rd St
11463:TSX Broadway
11390:Times Square
11195:Hearst Tower
11085:Aeolian Hall
10945:46 W 55th St
10940:30 W 56th St
10925:12 W 56th St
10920:11 W 54th St
10915:10 W 56th St
10783:
10773:
10713:Past groups:
10712:
10660:Village Gate
10590:Past spaces:
10589:
10563:Café Bohemia
10548:Music clubs:
10547:
10512:
10502:
10432:Past spaces:
10431:
10411:
10396:
10386:
10380:Major venues
10293:
10272:
10235:
10193:
10171:
10132:. Retrieved
10123:
10120:"Music View"
10114:
10095:
10089:
10077:. Retrieved
10068:
10038:. Retrieved
10027:
9989:
9983:
9971:. Retrieved
9962:
9937:. Retrieved
9928:
9921:Popik, Barry
9900:. Retrieved
9891:
9865:
9856:
9844:. Retrieved
9835:
9826:
9814:. Retrieved
9794:
9787:
9775:. Retrieved
9755:
9748:
9736:. Retrieved
9732:
9704:. Retrieved
9700:
9690:
9678:. Retrieved
9669:
9660:
9648:. Retrieved
9639:
9630:
9618:. Retrieved
9613:
9604:
9592:. Retrieved
9587:
9578:
9566:. Retrieved
9561:
9552:
9542:November 21,
9540:. Retrieved
9531:
9522:
9510:. Retrieved
9501:
9492:
9480:. Retrieved
9476:
9466:
9454:. Retrieved
9449:
9440:
9428:. Retrieved
9419:
9406:
9394:. Retrieved
9379:
9372:
9360:. Retrieved
9345:
9338:
9326:. Retrieved
9311:
9304:
9294:December 25,
9292:. Retrieved
9288:the original
9283:
9274:
9264:December 25,
9262:. Retrieved
9253:
9244:
9225:
9219:
9209:November 14,
9207:. Retrieved
9198:
9182:
9170:. Retrieved
9161:
9152:
9142:November 14,
9140:. Retrieved
9131:
9119:
9109:November 21,
9107:. Retrieved
9087:
9080:
9070:February 13,
9068:. Retrieved
9063:
9054:
9044:February 13,
9042:. Retrieved
9038:
9025:
9015:February 13,
9013:. Retrieved
9009:
8996:
8986:February 13,
8984:. Retrieved
8979:
8970:
8960:February 13,
8958:. Retrieved
8953:
8944:
8934:February 13,
8932:. Retrieved
8927:
8918:
8908:February 13,
8906:. Retrieved
8902:
8892:
8882:February 13,
8880:. Retrieved
8876:
8866:
8856:February 13,
8854:. Retrieved
8849:
8840:
8830:February 13,
8828:. Retrieved
8822:
8812:
8802:November 14,
8800:. Retrieved
8785:
8776:
8770:
8758:
8746:. Retrieved
8742:
8729:
8717:. Retrieved
8711:
8701:
8689:. Retrieved
8685:
8672:
8651:. Retrieved
8647:
8634:
8622:. Retrieved
8618:
8608:
8596:. Retrieved
8592:
8577:. Retrieved
8573:
8563:
8551:. Retrieved
8542:
8533:
8523:November 21,
8521:. Retrieved
8512:
8503:
8493:November 21,
8491:. Retrieved
8482:
8472:
8460:. Retrieved
8451:
8427:. Retrieved
8422:the original
8416:
8406:
8394:. Retrieved
8385:
8375:
8363:. Retrieved
8336:November 14,
8334:. Retrieved
8325:
8298:. Retrieved
8289:
8279:
8267:. Retrieved
8258:
8249:
8237:. Retrieved
8228:
8215:
8203:. Retrieved
8199:
8189:
8177:. Retrieved
8173:
8163:
8151:. Retrieved
8149:. p. 20
8144:
8134:
8122:. Retrieved
8111:
8101:
8089:. Retrieved
8080:
8067:
8055:. Retrieved
8046:
8036:
8024:. Retrieved
8015:
8002:
7990:. Retrieved
7981:
7968:
7956:. Retrieved
7945:
7936:
7924:. Retrieved
7915:
7891:. Retrieved
7882:
7869:
7857:. Retrieved
7848:
7835:
7823:. Retrieved
7812:
7802:
7790:. Retrieved
7781:
7768:
7756:. Retrieved
7745:
7735:
7723:. Retrieved
7714:
7704:
7692:. Retrieved
7683:
7674:
7662:. Retrieved
7653:
7640:
7628:. Retrieved
7619:
7609:
7597:. Retrieved
7586:
7576:
7557:
7551:
7539:. Retrieved
7530:
7520:
7510:November 14,
7508:. Retrieved
7499:
7471:. Retrieved
7462:
7449:
7437:. Retrieved
7433:
7420:
7408:. Retrieved
7399:
7386:
7374:. Retrieved
7365:
7352:
7340:. Retrieved
7331:
7322:
7312:November 14,
7310:. Retrieved
7306:the original
7296:
7284:. Retrieved
7275:
7265:
7253:. Retrieved
7244:
7231:
7219:. Retrieved
7210:
7200:
7188:. Retrieved
7179:
7169:
7157:. Retrieved
7148:
7138:
7126:. Retrieved
7115:
7105:
7093:. Retrieved
7084:
7074:
7062:. Retrieved
7053:
7043:
7031:. Retrieved
7022:
7013:
7001:. Retrieved
6992:
6979:
6967:. Retrieved
6956:
6946:
6934:. Retrieved
6929:
6920:
6908:. Retrieved
6901:
6876:. Retrieved
6874:. p. 93
6869:
6842:. Retrieved
6833:
6805:. Retrieved
6796:
6786:
6774:. Retrieved
6765:
6755:
6743:. Retrieved
6732:
6707:. Retrieved
6690:
6680:
6668:. Retrieved
6659:
6650:
6638:. Retrieved
6629:
6619:
6607:. Retrieved
6598:
6591:Shipp, E. R.
6570:. Retrieved
6566:
6541:. Retrieved
6532:
6522:
6510:
6498:. Retrieved
6494:
6466:. Retrieved
6462:
6449:
6437:. Retrieved
6428:
6415:
6398:
6392:
6380:. Retrieved
6371:
6358:
6346:. Retrieved
6337:
6327:
6315:. Retrieved
6304:
6295:
6283:. Retrieved
6274:
6265:
6255:November 14,
6253:. Retrieved
6243:
6233:November 14,
6231:. Retrieved
6217:
6207:December 18,
6205:. Retrieved
6196:
6162:December 18,
6160:. Retrieved
6151:
6141:
6129:. Retrieved
6120:
6107:
6090:
6084:
6074:December 18,
6072:. Retrieved
6063:
6054:
6037:
6031:
6014:
6008:
5998:December 18,
5996:. Retrieved
5987:
5974:
5964:December 17,
5962:. Retrieved
5950:
5938:
5926:. Retrieved
5915:
5906:
5896:December 18,
5894:. Retrieved
5885:
5862:December 18,
5860:. Retrieved
5851:
5841:
5829:. Retrieved
5820:
5811:
5801:December 18,
5799:. Retrieved
5790:
5781:
5744:
5715:December 18,
5713:. Retrieved
5704:
5691:
5679:. Retrieved
5670:
5661:
5649:. Retrieved
5640:
5630:
5622:the original
5615:
5590:. Retrieved
5581:
5572:
5555:
5549:
5532:
5526:
5516:December 18,
5514:. Retrieved
5505:
5496:
5479:
5473:
5461:. Retrieved
5452:
5446:
5439:
5422:
5416:
5399:
5393:
5381:. Retrieved
5376:
5367:
5355:. Retrieved
5346:
5337:
5320:
5314:
5304:December 18,
5302:. Retrieved
5293:
5284:
5267:
5261:
5249:. Retrieved
5244:
5220:. Retrieved
5215:
5176:. Retrieved
5167:
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5136:
5127:
5115:. Retrieved
5110:
5101:
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5080:
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5054:
5048:
5036:. Retrieved
5029:
5020:
5008:. Retrieved
5004:
4991:
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4947:
4941:
4929:. Retrieved
4920:
4907:
4895:. Retrieved
4882:
4873:
4856:
4850:
4816:
4810:
4798:. Retrieved
4789:
4780:
4768:. Retrieved
4759:
4750:
4738:. Retrieved
4727:
4718:
4710:columbia.edu
4708:– via
4702:. Retrieved
4693:
4684:
4672:. Retrieved
4660:
4648:
4636:. Retrieved
4627:
4618:
4601:
4595:
4583:. Retrieved
4572:
4563:
4551:. Retrieved
4539:
4527:
4510:
4504:
4492:. Retrieved
4483:
4474:
4466:columbia.edu
4464:– via
4458:. Retrieved
4449:
4418:
4412:
4400:. Retrieved
4388:
4310:
4289:. Retrieved
4280:
4271:
4259:
4230:. Retrieved
4219:Architecture
4218:
4188:. Retrieved
4184:
4174:
4164:November 14,
4162:. Retrieved
4151:
4141:
4131:November 14,
4129:. Retrieved
4118:
4108:
4096:. Retrieved
4089:
4062:. Retrieved
4058:
4048:
4029:
4010:, p. 3.
3984:. Retrieved
3934:
3909:. Retrieved
3902:
3873:. Retrieved
3864:
3830:. Retrieved
3821:
3791:. Retrieved
3782:
3773:
3761:. Retrieved
3752:
3739:
3727:. Retrieved
3718:
3705:
3670:. Retrieved
3661:
3651:
3639:. Retrieved
3627:
3597:. Retrieved
3588:
3560:November 14,
3558:. Retrieved
3549:
3521:. Retrieved
3512:
3480:. Retrieved
3446:. Retrieved
3437:
3397:. Retrieved
3388:
3378:
3368:November 14,
3366:. Retrieved
3357:
3323:. Retrieved
3270:November 14,
3268:. Retrieved
3254:
3242:. Retrieved
3233:
3223:
3180:. Retrieved
3169:
3144:. Retrieved
3132:
3105:. Retrieved
3096:
3087:
3075:. Retrieved
3070:
3061:
3028:columbia.edu
3026:– via
3020:. Retrieved
3011:
2985:November 14,
2983:. Retrieved
2979:the original
2969:
2942:. Retrieved
2920:
2908:. Retrieved
2899:
2866:
2843:. Retrieved
2834:
2804:
2758:
2711:, p. 2.
2678:
2652:columbia.edu
2650:– via
2644:. Retrieved
2635:
2595:. Retrieved
2554:. Retrieved
2550:the original
2545:
2536:
2519:
2498:. Retrieved
2486:
2434:
2395:. Retrieved
2391:
2381:
2369:. Retrieved
2345:
2337:
2320:
2310:
2300:November 12,
2298:. Retrieved
2274:
2264:November 18,
2262:. Retrieved
2253:
2243:
2231:. Retrieved
2216:
2207:
2197:September 8,
2195:. Retrieved
2177:
2165:. Retrieved
2152:
2132:the original
2122:
2110:. Retrieved
2101:
2095:
2083:. Retrieved
2074:
2068:
2061:
2053:the original
2048:
2021:
2012:
1993:
1943:
1889:and pianist
1880:
1872:
1860:
1849:Mischa Elman
1817:
1813:
1798:
1777:
1745:
1741:
1738:Other events
1725:
1718:
1710:
1683:Led Zeppelin
1668:
1640:Cecil Taylor
1600:Norman Granz
1581:
1570:
1557:Bruno Walter
1538:
1527:
1507:Edward Elgar
1481:
1450:
1433:
1415:
1402:
1391:
1387:
1368:
1354:
1350:
1338:
1323:
1302:
1298:
1289:White Nights
1287:
1284:
1262:
1246:
1238:
1226:
1223:Preservation
1211:
1208:
1200:
1196:Aeolian Hall
1189:
1172:
1168:
1160:
1131:
1116:Franz Rummel
1112:
1106:
1098:
1084:
1081:
1060:Union Square
1029:
1001:
972:
968:
960:
946:
939:
917:
908:
896:
887:
883:
845:barrel vault
841:
822:
804:
784:
764:
746:are made of
736:band courses
732:
723:
696:
679:Central Park
647:Sixth Avenue
644:
568:cater-corner
549:
537:Central Park
522:
486:
482:
470:57th Streets
413:
412:
355:06101.000409
349:NYSRHP
174:Construction
154:Concert hall
96:
45:
14275:Other lists
14124:Westchester
14054:Schenectady
13849:Cattaraugus
13437:Park Avenue
13313:Streets and
13258:57th Street
13248:50th Street
13243:50th Street
13238:49th Street
13106:Educational
12938:Rose Museum
12815:Le Pavillon
12765:Kurumazushi
12589:Pabst Hotel
12478:Plaza Hotel
12428:Luxor Hotel
12264:New Century
12209:48th Street
12204:44th Street
12112:Walter Kerr
12107:Todd Haimes
12017:John Golden
11820:Trump Tower
11735:Lever House
11710:Fuller Bldg
11695:DuMont Bldg
11600:500 Park Av
11590:450 Park Av
11580:432 Park Av
11575:425 Park Av
11565:399 Park Av
11555:345 Park Av
11550:299 Park Av
11545:277 Park Av
11540:270 Park Av
11535:245 Park Av
11525:175 Park Av
11495:7 E 44th St
11490:3 E 57th St
11423:20 Times Sq
11418:11 Times Sq
11398:1 Astor Plz
11365:1271 6th Av
11360:1251 6th Av
11355:1221 6th Av
11350:1211 6th Av
11297:Tower Fifth
11237:The Osborne
11090:Alwyn Court
11070:1345 6th Av
11065:1301 6th Av
11060:1166 6th Av
10910:7 W 54th St
10905:5 W 54th St
10784:Categories:
10681:Mabou Mines
10640:The Factory
10600:Bottom Line
10513:Playhouses:
10478:The Kitchen
10463:Dixon Place
10427:City Center
10276:. Messner.
9973:December 4,
9816:October 15,
9777:October 15,
9412:John Martin
8598:January 17,
8579:January 10,
6113:Talese, Gay
2371:December 4,
2149:"NYCityMap"
1809:Famous joke
1699:Jethro Tull
1675:The Beatles
1660:Count Basie
1632:Nina Simone
1624:Miles Davis
1592:Fats Waller
1427:2006 after
1357:Zubin Mehta
1342:César Pelli
1249:Isaac Stern
1056:14th Street
1004:Rose Museum
893:Zankel Hall
851:with heavy
825:Isaac Stern
701:along with
584:Alwyn Court
572:the Osborne
533:57th Street
529:56th Street
313: /
289:Coordinates
79:57th Street
18:Zankel Hall
14408:Categories
14114:Washington
14034:Rensselaer
13969:Montgomery
13954:Livingston
13859:Chautauqua
13097:Paley Park
12973:Clubhouses
12865:Stage Deli
12775:Lespinasse
12067:Neil Simon
12022:Lena Horne
11962:Broadhurst
11937:Ambassador
11780:Ritz Tower
11745:LVMH Tower
11645:919 3rd Av
11635:689 5th Av
11630:647 5th Av
11413:4 Times Sq
11408:3 Times Sq
11403:1 Times Sq
11302:Trump Parc
11287:Solow Bldg
11247:Park House
11160:Crown Bldg
11125:Brill Bldg
11055:888 7th Av
11050:810 7th Av
11045:750 7th Av
11040:740 8th Av
11035:712 5th Av
11030:660 5th Av
11025:650 5th Av
11020:608 5th Av
11015:520 5th Av
11010:500 5th Av
10789:Jazz clubs
10769:Music club
10595:Back Fence
10453:ABC No Rio
10297:. Abrams.
10156:(Report).
10134:August 21,
10079:August 21,
10040:August 21,
9939:August 27,
9902:August 27,
9888:"The Joke"
9846:August 20,
9680:August 18,
9650:August 18,
9512:January 6,
8462:August 18,
8429:August 18,
8300:August 20,
8269:August 20,
8239:August 20,
8221:Dwyer, Jim
8124:August 20,
8091:August 20,
8057:August 19,
8026:August 19,
7992:August 19,
7926:August 19,
7893:August 19,
7859:August 20,
7825:August 20,
7792:August 20,
7758:August 20,
7725:August 20,
7694:August 20,
7664:August 20,
7630:August 21,
7599:August 21,
7541:August 20,
7473:August 20,
7410:August 20,
7376:August 20,
7342:August 20,
7286:August 19,
7255:August 19,
7221:August 20,
7190:August 20,
7159:August 19,
7128:August 19,
7095:August 19,
7064:August 21,
7033:August 21,
7003:August 18,
6969:August 20,
6844:August 18,
6807:August 19,
6776:August 20,
6745:August 19,
6709:August 21,
6670:August 21,
6640:August 19,
6609:August 19,
6543:August 20,
6439:August 19,
6407:1326941243
6382:August 19,
6348:August 20,
6317:August 19,
6285:August 19,
6131:August 20,
6099:1325120353
6046:1323977017
5831:August 19,
5592:August 24,
5564:1237393750
5541:1237352810
5488:1317982631
5463:August 24,
5431:1111977225
5408:1113011924
5357:August 24,
5329:1112791299
5276:1113115352
5178:August 18,
5147:August 20,
5091:August 20,
4931:August 18,
4897:August 18,
4800:August 18,
4770:August 18,
4740:August 18,
4704:August 18,
4674:August 18,
4638:August 18,
4585:August 18,
4553:August 17,
4494:August 17,
4460:August 17,
4402:August 17,
4291:August 17,
4232:August 21,
3832:August 18,
3793:August 18,
3763:August 19,
3729:August 19,
3672:August 19,
3641:August 21,
3599:August 19,
3523:August 21,
3448:August 19,
3399:August 18,
3244:August 21,
3182:August 19,
3146:August 20,
3107:August 18,
3022:August 18,
2910:August 20,
2845:August 20,
2646:August 18,
2556:August 18,
2500:August 17,
2112:August 27,
2085:August 27,
1930:References
1883:apocryphal
1869:Other lore
1821:Jack Benny
1756:Mark Twain
1732:Yugoslavia
1549:RCA Victor
1467:See also:
1441:Lily Safra
1010:and light
950:proscenium
866:Corinthian
799:terracotta
787:balustrade
771:modillions
669:, and the
667:Lotos Club
552:city block
360:NYCL
301:73°58′48″W
298:40°45′54″N
279: 0278
86:, New York
14256:Rochester
14251:Rhinebeck
14241:Peekskill
14202:Manhattan
14059:Schoharie
13939:Jefferson
13822:by county
13658:Manhattan
13581:Manhattan
13524:See also:
12985:The Brook
12653:nightlife
12173:Sony Hall
12102:Studio 54
12082:St. James
12062:Music Box
11810:Sutton 58
11690:CitySpire
11165:Coty Bldg
10871:Buildings
10855:Manhattan
10759:Jazz club
10744:Infoshops
10645:Palladium
10222:22741487M
9795:Classical
9640:Billboard
9430:March 24,
9172:April 12,
8763:Page 2011
8659:See also
8640:Page, Tim
8543:amNewYork
8386:Curbed NY
7947:Billboard
7568:280806961
6699:121888912
6023:540427905
5196:Page 2011
5063:573781812
4825:573653596
4610:573539715
4519:573489130
4429:573444377
4347:Page 2011
4252:Page 2011
4040:135117567
3943:424782471
3389:NYMag.com
3294:Page 2011
3077:April 23,
3054:Page 2011
2962:Page 2011
2944:March 13,
2875:573728011
2767:573484756
2597:March 13,
2528:573493968
2167:March 20,
2004:Citations
1723:in 1971.
1628:Gil Evans
1120:Old 100th
963:pilasters
779:springing
740:pilasters
604:CitySpire
554:with the
197:Architect
84:Manhattan
14315:Category
14261:Syracuse
14187:Brooklyn
14134:Southern
14129:Northern
14099:Tompkins
14089:Sullivan
14064:Schuyler
14049:Saratoga
14044:Rockland
13994:Onondaga
13934:Herkimer
13929:Hamilton
13909:Franklin
13894:Dutchess
13889:Delaware
13884:Cortland
13879:Columbia
13869:Chenango
13834:Allegany
13756:New York
13690:Brooklyn
13613:Brooklyn
13402:Broadway
13201:stations
12943:Spyscape
12879:Museums/
12665:54 Below
12483:The Quin
12289:Victoria
12057:Minskoff
12047:Majestic
12027:Longacre
12007:Imperial
11992:Gershwin
11967:Broadway
11918:Theaters
11292:Tower 49
11150:CBS Bldg
10650:285 KENT
10568:Cafe Wha
10498:WOW Café
10458:Ars Nova
10387:Centers:
10256:12314472
10232:(1985).
10214:70267065
10128:Archived
10073:Archived
10034:Archived
9967:Archived
9933:Archived
9896:Archived
9864:(1956).
9840:Archived
9810:Archived
9771:Archived
9738:March 6,
9727:(2021).
9706:March 6,
9674:Archived
9644:Archived
9536:Archived
9506:Archived
9477:Playbill
9424:Archived
9396:June 27,
9362:June 27,
9328:June 27,
9258:Archived
9203:Archived
9166:Archived
9136:Archived
9103:Archived
8824:Playbill
8796:Archived
8748:March 6,
8719:March 6,
8713:Playbill
8691:March 6,
8661:Playbill
8653:March 6,
8624:March 6,
8574:Eater NY
8547:Archived
8517:Archived
8487:Archived
8456:Archived
8452:ABC News
8390:Archived
8359:Archived
8330:Archived
8294:Archived
8263:Archived
8233:Archived
8205:March 5,
8179:March 5,
8153:March 5,
8118:Archived
8085:Archived
8051:Archived
8020:Archived
7986:Archived
7952:Archived
7920:Archived
7887:Archived
7853:Archived
7819:Archived
7786:Archived
7752:Archived
7719:Archived
7688:Archived
7658:Archived
7624:Archived
7593:Archived
7564:ProQuest
7535:Archived
7504:Archived
7467:Archived
7404:Archived
7370:Archived
7336:Archived
7280:Archived
7249:Archived
7215:Archived
7184:Archived
7153:Archived
7122:Archived
7089:Archived
7058:Archived
7027:Archived
6997:Archived
6963:Archived
6838:Archived
6801:Archived
6770:Archived
6739:Archived
6703:Archived
6695:ProQuest
6664:Archived
6634:Archived
6603:Archived
6537:Archived
6433:Archived
6403:ProQuest
6376:Archived
6342:Archived
6311:Archived
6279:Archived
6201:Archived
6156:Archived
6125:Archived
6095:ProQuest
6068:Archived
6042:ProQuest
6019:ProQuest
5992:Archived
5955:Archived
5922:Archived
5890:Archived
5856:Archived
5825:Archived
5795:Archived
5773:1130718M
5765:32159240
5709:Archived
5675:Archived
5645:Archived
5586:Archived
5560:ProQuest
5537:ProQuest
5510:Archived
5484:ProQuest
5457:Archived
5427:ProQuest
5404:ProQuest
5351:Archived
5325:ProQuest
5298:Archived
5272:ProQuest
5172:Archived
5141:Archived
5085:Archived
5059:ProQuest
4966:13498952
4925:Archived
4891:Archived
4865:94850411
4861:ProQuest
4821:ProQuest
4794:Archived
4764:Archived
4734:Archived
4698:Archived
4665:Archived
4632:Archived
4606:ProQuest
4579:Archived
4544:Archived
4515:ProQuest
4488:Archived
4454:Archived
4425:ProQuest
4393:Archived
4329:17510109
4285:Archived
4223:Archived
4158:Archived
4153:New York
4125:Archived
4120:New York
4036:ProQuest
3980:Archived
3939:ProQuest
3869:Archived
3826:Archived
3787:Archived
3757:Archived
3723:Archived
3666:Archived
3632:Archived
3593:Archived
3554:Archived
3517:Archived
3476:Archived
3442:Archived
3393:Archived
3362:Archived
3319:Archived
3264:Archived
3238:Archived
3176:Archived
3137:Archived
3101:Archived
3016:Archived
2938:Archived
2904:Archived
2871:ProQuest
2839:Archived
2813:94939305
2809:ProQuest
2763:ProQuest
2640:Archived
2588:Archived
2524:ProQuest
2491:Archived
2453:40698653
2397:June 13,
2362:Archived
2318:(1939).
2291:Archived
2258:Archived
2227:Archived
2225:. 2018.
2218:mta.info
2191:Archived
2161:Archived
2106:Archived
2079:Archived
1994:Carnegie
1897:See also
1855:with no
1804:Folklore
1163:scalpers
1038:and the
1020:coffered
1016:capitals
925:Neoprene
870:capitals
651:Broadway
527:between
491:and the
343:66000535
161:Capacity
142:Operator
14348:Portals
14266:Yonkers
14169:Buffalo
14157:by city
14141:Wyoming
14084:Suffolk
14079:Steuben
14009:Orleans
13999:Ontario
13984:Niagara
13959:Madison
13919:Genesee
13874:Clinton
13864:Chemung
12855:Satsuki
12850:Sardi's
12810:Patsy's
12680:Aureole
12660:21 Club
12331:Current
12269:Olympia
12239:Embassy
12224:Capitol
12092:Shubert
12052:Marquis
11947:Belasco
11476:East of
10881:West of
10737:Related
10503:Poetry:
10483:KGB bar
10473:La Mama
10412:Venues:
10147:Sources
9482:May 10,
9456:May 10,
8553:June 9,
8396:June 9,
8365:June 9,
8259:NPR.org
7958:May 10,
7814:Newsday
7747:Newsday
7588:Newsday
7332:Newsday
7276:Newsday
7211:Newsday
7117:Newsday
6958:Newsday
6903:Newsday
6734:Newsday
6015:The Sun
5447:Messiah
5111:The Sun
4790:The Sun
4760:The Sun
4574:The Sun
2392:ARTnews
2153:NYC.gov
1837:maestro
1829:beatnik
1715:Chicago
1695:country
1026:History
868:-style
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