Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 29 of
29
with 100 items per page.
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre abstract "The ANTA Washington Square Theatre was a theatre located on 40 West 4th St., in Greenwich Village, in New York City, and run by the American National Theater and Academy (ANTA). The theater was located away from the mainstream Broadway district, and was originally designed as a prototype for the Vivian Beaumont Theater. Demolished in 1968, it used a thrust stage tilted toward the audience, with the audience sitting on three sides of it. It did not employ the use of a curtain.The theater, which was not intended to be permanent, had a seating capacity of 1,158 and was constructed for an estimated $525,000 on land lent by New York University. One observer praised "the fine acoustics that have been achieved by the creation of irregularly surfaced concave walls." However, that same observer noted that "the interior of the building is not striking and might well be mistaken for a small industrial plant of some sort."Several highly regarded plays had their runs at the ANTA Washington Square. Among the most notable were the original productions of Arthur Miller's plays After the Fall and Incident at Vichy, and the 1964 revival of Eugene O'Neill's Marco Millions, starring Hal Holbrook as Marco Polo and David Wayne as Kublai Khan. A production relished by many Molière lovers was William Ball's 1964 staging of Tartuffe, with an "outrageous" Michael O'Sullivan in the title role. Quite likely, the most famous show ever to play at the ANTA Washington Square was the smash hit musical Man of La Mancha, which began its first New York run there on November 22, 1965 and transferred to the more conventional Martin Beck Theatre in 1968, pending the demolition of the Washington Square Theatre.".
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre wikiPageID "20129171".
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre wikiPageRevisionID "606308247".
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre hasPhotoCollection ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre.
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre subject Category:Buildings_and_structures_demolished_in_1968.
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre subject Category:Former_theatres_in_Manhattan.
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre point "40.7291 -73.9963".
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre type Artifact100021939.
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre type Building102913152.
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre type BuildingsAndStructuresDemolishedIn1968.
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre type FormerTheatresOfManhattan.
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre type Object100002684.
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre type PhysicalEntity100001930.
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre type Structure104341686.
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre type Theater104417809.
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre type Whole100003553.
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre type YagoGeoEntity.
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre type YagoPermanentlyLocatedEntity.
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre type SpatialThing.
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre comment "The ANTA Washington Square Theatre was a theatre located on 40 West 4th St., in Greenwich Village, in New York City, and run by the American National Theater and Academy (ANTA). The theater was located away from the mainstream Broadway district, and was originally designed as a prototype for the Vivian Beaumont Theater. Demolished in 1968, it used a thrust stage tilted toward the audience, with the audience sitting on three sides of it.".
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre label "ANTA Washington Square Theatre".
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre sameAs m.04y6vxp.
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre sameAs Q4653056.
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre sameAs Q4653056.
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre sameAs ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre.
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre lat "40.7291".
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre long "-73.9963".
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre wasDerivedFrom ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre?oldid=606308247.
- ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre isPrimaryTopicOf ANTA_Washington_Square_Theatre.