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    • History | Lincoln Theatre
      • When the Lincoln Theatre was built, it was hailed for its originality and beauty. The original owner, Elden Weigel (E. W.) Pollock, enlisted noted Seattle architect William Aitken to design the Lincoln in a modified Renaissance Revival style.
      lincolntheatre.org › history
  1. Ford's Theatre is a theater located in Washington, D.C., which opened in 1863. The theater is best known for being the site of the assassination of Abraham Lincoln.

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  3. David H. Koch Theater (formerly New York State Theater): a 2,586-seat theater; constructed as the home of the New York City Ballet, it is also the former home of the New York City Opera and the Music Theater of Lincoln Center companies.

  4. Groundbreaking with President Eisenhower. The dream of creating a campus for a variety of performing arts became a reality on May 14, 1959, at the corner of Broadway and West 64th Street in...

  5. The Lincoln Theatre, built in 1922, was a cultural center of D.C., predating and influencing Harlem's renaissance. Washington natives Duke Ellington and Pearl Bailey were joined by nationally acclaimed artists such as Ella Fitzgerald, Billie Holiday, Nat King Cole, Cab Calloway, Louis Armstrong and Sarah Vaughn, who performed regularly on the ...

  6. Sep 11, 2020 · The Lincoln Theatre was built in 1922 in this locale. It was originally home to vaudeville acts and silent films. In 1927, it became a beautiful cinema venue with a ballroom downstairs, called the Lincoln Colonnade. President Franklin D. Roosevelt celebrated many birthdays in that space.

  7. On May 14, 1959, when ground was broken by President Eisenhower to create Lincoln Center, a lot more was overturned than some soil on the west side of Manhattan.

  8. Photograph of President Abraham Lincoln, 1865 (Library of Congress) August 27, 1863: Ford’s “New” Theatre opened. President Abraham Lincoln enjoyed live theatrical performances at various venues around town as a respite from the demands of the office, and the war.

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