New York Trip February 5Th to 8Th, 2019

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

New York Trip February 5Th to 8Th, 2019 Royal West Academy Final Program - New York trip February 5th to 8th, 2019 Transportation : Autobus Fleur de Lys (4 deluxes coach) - (418) 832-7788 No. Conf.: 77697 Hotel: The Manhattan at Times Square Hotel, 790 7th Avenue, New York, NY Hotel for Bus Drivers: La Quinta, 265 route 3, Clifton , New Jersey Jour 1 Tuesday, February 5th, 2019 Montreal - New York 06h45 Meet your bus transportation at Royal West Academy, 189 Easton Avenue, Montreal 07h00 Depart for New York City *590 km, around 6h00 + US custom + stop Stop for lunch (not included) 15h00 Approximate arrival at your hotel in Manhattan Unload the bus and check-in / Meet your local tour escorts (Mike, Tim, Lawrence and Mitch) *End of bus services Time to discover Times Square Dinner on your own (not included) 19h30 Basketball game: New York Knicks vs Detroit Pistons at Madison Square Garden (included) 78 tickets (72 students + 6 teachers) 21h00 Visit Top of the Rock (included) 92 students + 6 teachers No Conf.: 42740920486404 Return to your hotel - 11pm Night in Manhattan *Security service from 11pm to 4am (included) Royal West Academy Final Program - New York trip February 5th to 8th, 2019 Jour 2 Wednesday, February 6th, 2019 New York 07h00 Breakfast buffet at Mama Sbarro’s at Times Square, 1606 Broadway (included) 09h00 Meet your bus and your local guides in the hotel lobby City tour of New York City (included, 1 guide per bus), suggestions: Upper West Side, Central Park. St-John-the-Divine Cathedral, Harlem, East Side, Flatiron Building, Wall Street, St- Paul Chapel, Trinity Church, 9/11 Memorial… 12h00 End of the tour and lunch on your own (not included) Visit the 9/11 Museum (included) No. Conf.: 3570178 13h30 Group 1 (82 students + 6 teachers + 2 tour escorts) 14h00 Group 2 (82 students + 6 teachers + 2 tour escorts) Dinner on your own (not included) End of bus services (time to be confirmed by the client) 20h00 Hockey game: New York Rangers vs Boston Bruins at Madison Square Garden (included) 40 tickets 19h00 Broadway show: Mean Girls @ August Wilson Theatre, 245 West 52nd Street (included) 57 tickets No. Conf.: 750825 (53 students + 4 teachers) 20h00 Broadway show: Dear Evan Hansen @ Music Box Theatre, 239 West 45th Street (included) 80 tickets No. Conf.: 749374 (73 students + 7 teachers) Return to your hotel – 11-11:30pm Night in Manhattan *Security service from 11pm to 4am (included) Royal West Academy Final Program - New York trip February 5th to 8th, 2019 Jour 3 Thursday, February 7th 2019 New York Breakfast in Times Square (not included) UNITED NATION’S GROUP 16 students + 3 teachers (1 tour escort will wait the group in the lobby) 09h15 Group arrival at the United Nations 10h15 Guided tour of the United Nations (included) No. Conf.: 47677668 12h00 Time to shop & have lunch (not included) MOMA’S GROUP 87 students + 6 teachers + 2 tour escorts 10h30 Group 1 (included) 44 students + 3 teachers + 1 tour escort No. Conf.: 101213342 10h40 Group 2 (included) 43 students + 3 teachers + 1 tour escort No. Conf.: 101215533 12h30 Time to shop & have lunch (not included) AMNH GROUP 61 students + 3 teachers + 1 tour escort 10h00 Visit the American Museum of Natural History (included) No. Conf.: 6820044 12h30 Time to shop & have lunch (not included) 15h00 Visit Madame Tussauds Wax Museum (included) No. Conf.: 3735390 164 students + 12 teachers + 4 tour escorts Dinner on your own (not included) 19h00 Broadway show: Kinky Boots @ Al Hirschfeld Theatre, 302 West 45th Street (included) 96 tickets No. Conf.: 749375 (93 students + 3 teachers) 19h00 Broadway show: Waitress @ Brooks Atkinson Theatre, 256 West 47th Street (included) 80 tickets No. Conf.: 750813 (71 students + 9 teachers) Night in Manhattan *Security service from 11pm to 4am (included) Royal West Academy Final Program - New York trip February 5th to 8th, 2019 Jour 4 Friday, February 8th 2019 New York - Montreal 07h00 Breakfast in Times Square (not included) 09h00 Check-out, meet your drivers & load the bus Staten Island Ferry ride Transfer to Chinatown and time to shop on Canal Street, Little Italy and Soho Lunch on your own (not included) 13h00 Meet your bus and transfer to Montreal *590 km, around 6h00 + stops + canadian custom Potential stop for quick dinner (not included) 20h30 Approximate arrival time at Royal West Academy (Students will phone or text once across the border.) Royal West Academy Final Program - New York trip February 5th to 8th, 2019 .
Recommended publications
  • Read Where Architecture Expert Paul Goldberg Comments on the History of New York's Famous Skyscrapers. As You Do So, Complete
    Can you identify any of these buildings? What do they all have in common? Which one do you like best? Read where architecture expert Paul Goldberg comments on the history of New York’s famous skyscrapers. As you do so, complete the following tasks: · In New York buildings are not only buildings, they become ___________________ · New York took over Chicago as regards skyscrapers in ___________________. · The Woolworth building was the tallest building worldwide for _________________. · The _______________ defined the Manhattan skyline. · They are trying to keep a memory of the people who were lost and also to show New York’s ______________________________. · New York stands out from the other cities as the embodiment of ____________________. Woolworth Building; Empire State Building; Chrysler Building; Flatiron; Hearst Tower The Woolworth Building, at 57 stories (floors), is one of the oldest—and one of the most famous—skyscrapers in New York City. It was the world’s tallest building for 17 years. More than 95 years after its construction, it is still one of the fifty tallest buildings in the United States as well as one of the twenty tallest buildings in New York City. The building is a National Historic Landmark, having been listed in 1966. The Empire State Building is a 102-story landmark Art Deco skyscraper in New York City at the intersection of Fifth Avenue and West 34th Street. Like many New York building, it has become seen as a work of art. Its name is derived from the nickname for New York, The Empire State. It stood as the world's tallest building for more than 40 years, from its completion in 1931 until construction of the World Trade Center's North Tower was completed in 1972.
    [Show full text]
  • Fences Study Guide
    Pacific Conservatory Theatre Student Matinee Program Presents August Wilson’s Fences Generously sponsored by Franca Bongi-Lockard Nancy K. Johnson A Study Guide for Educators Welcome to the Pacific Conservatory Theatre A NOTE TO THE TEACHER Thank you for bringing your students to PCPA at Allan Hancock College. Here are some helpful hints for your visit to the Marian Theatre. The top priority of our staff is to provide an enjoyable day of live theatre for you and your students. We offer you this study guide as a tool to prepare your students prior to the performance. SUGGESTIONS FOR STUDENT ETIQUETTE Note-able behavior is a vital part of theater for youth. Going to the theater is not a casual event. It is a special occasion. If students are prepared properly, it will be a memorable, educational experience they will remember for years. 1. Have students enter the theater in a single file. Chaperones should be one adult for every ten students. Our ushers will assist you with locating your seats. Please wait until the usher has seated your party before any rearranging of seats to avoid injury and confusion. While seated, teachers should space themselves so they are visible, between every groups of ten students. Teachers and adults must remain with their group during the entire performance. 2. Once seated in the theater, students may go to the bathroom in small groups and with the teacher's permission. Please chaperone younger students. Once the show is over, please remain seated until the House Manager dismisses your school. 3. Please remind your students that we do not permit: - food, gum, drinks, smoking, hats, backpacks or large purses - disruptive talking.
    [Show full text]
  • 118 West 22Nd Street 118 West 22Nd Street ™ 118 West 22Nd Street
    ™ 118 WEST 22ND STREET 118 WEST 22ND STREET ™ 118 WEST 22ND STREET 118 WEST 22ND STREET Built in 1911 by the architect Frederick C. Zobel, the 100,000 square foot 12-story loft building at 118 West 22nd Street is a perfect choice for companies looking for office space in the iconic Flatiron District, located just one block from Madison Square Park. Commuters have easy access to PATH and 1, C, F, E, N, M and R subway lines at nearby 23rd Street Station. Fantastic amenities can be found along Avenue of the Americas and 23rd Street; from Trader Joe’s and Eataly to Shake Shack and Blue Mercury Coffee, the area offers an abundance of food, beverage and retail options for all. The building welcomes tenants and visitors with an elegant light brown limestone facade that still boasts many of its original metal cladding and stucco decorations. ™ 118 WEST 22ND STREET THE BUILDING Location West 22nd Street between Avenue of the Americas and 7th Avenue Year Built 1911 Renovations Lobby - 2010; Facade Restoration - 2016 Building Size 100,000 SF Floors 12, plus mezzanine, 2 below-grade ™ 118118 WEST WEST 22ND22ND STREET TYPICAL FLOORFLOOR PLANPLAN 8,500 RSFRSF WEST 22ND STREET ™ 118 WEST 22ND STREET BUILDING SPECIFICATIONS Location West 22nd Street between Avenue Windows Double-insulated, operable of the Americas and 7th Avenue Fire & Class E fire alarm system with command Year Built 1911 Life Safety Systems station, building fully sprinklered Architect Frederick C. Zobel Security Access Attended lobby 9 am - 6 pm M-F, video intercom, closed-circuit cameras Building Size 100,000 SF Building Hours 24/7 tenant access; Attended lobby 12, plus mezzanine, 2 below-grade Floors 9 am - 6 pm M-F Construction Masonry & limestone Telecom Providers Verizon, Spectrum, Pilot Renovations Lobby - 2010; facade restoration - 2016 Cleaning Common areas M-F Loss Factor Full floors: 27%; multi-tenanted floors: Bicycle Storage None no greater than 35% Municipal Incentives N/A Floor Loads (per SF) 120 lbs./SF Transportation Subway: Lines 1 and 2 via 23rd Street 11'5" Avg Slab-to-Slab Station.
    [Show full text]
  • Spirit of Ame Rica Chee Rle a D E Rs
    *schedule subject to change SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY MORNING MORNING MORNING MORNING MORNING MORNING MORNING Arrive at New York Hilton 7 am 8 am 6 am 8 am 5:30 am Shuttle Service Midtown for Event Check-in Coupon Breakfast Coupon Breakfast TODAY Show Coupon Breakfast Uniform Check Assemble/Depart Final Run Through Rhinelander 10 am–5 pm 8–11 am 9 am 8:30 am 9 am Grand Ballroom Gallery Luggage Drop-off Rehearsal Spectators and Performers Check out with Dress Rehearsal Rhinelander Gallery America’s Hall I Assemble/Check-out Spectator America’s Hall I 6 am America’s Hall I America’s Hall I Depart Hilton for Parade Event Check-in Spectators Return to hotel by 10:30 am America’s Hall I 8 am • Statue of Liberty Room Check. Move to Grand Ballroom 9 am–12 pm Assemble in • Harbor Cruise 92nd Macy’s Thanksgiving • Orientation Rhinelander Gallery for • 9/11 Memorial 9 am Spectators Day Parade!® • Packet Pick-up Big Apple Tour • One World Observatory Coupon Breakfast 10:30 am • Hotel Check-in Tour ends in Times Square View from 4th Floor Balcony 10 am–12 pm at 11 am 12:30 pm • Times Square Check out with • Central Park Spectator Return to hotel by Room Check. AFTERNOON AFTERNOON AFTERNOON AFTERNOON AFTERNOON AFTERNOON 10 am–5 pm 11:30 am Coupon Lunch 12 pm 1 pm 12 pm • If rooms are not available, Coupon Lunch Coupon Lunch Coupon Lunch Coupon Lunch Continue Activities Have a you may wait in safe America’s Hall II 1 pm 2 pm 2-6 pm TBD Aladdin journey Radio City Music Hall Macy’s / Empire State Building Check out with • Report to our New Amsterdam Theatre Christmas Spectacular Spectator home! Information Desk 214 W.
    [Show full text]
  • Belvoir Terrace Staff 2018
    Belvoir Terrace Staff 2018 Belvoir Terrace Staff 2018 Diane Goldberg Marcus - Director Educational Background D.M.A. City University of New York M.M. The Juilliard School B.M. Oberlin Conservatory Teaching/Working Experience American Camping Association Accreditation Visitor Private Studio Teacher - New York, NY Piano Instructor - Hunter College, New York, NY Vocal Coach Assistant - Hunter College, New York, NY Chamber Music Coach - Idyllwild School of Music, CA Substitute Chamber Music Coach - Juilliard Pre-College Division Awards/Publications/Exhibitions/Performances/Affiliations Married to Michael Marcus, Owner/Director of Camp Greylock, boys camp Becket, MA Independent School Liaison - Parents In Action, NYC Health & Parenting Association Coordinator - Trinity School, NYC American Camping Association Accreditation Visitor D.M.A. Dissertation: Piano Pedagogy in New York: Interviews with Four Master Teachers (Interviews with Herbert Stessin, Martin Canin, Gilbert Kalish, and Arkady Aronov) Teaching Fellowship - The City University of New York Honorary Scholarship for the Masters of Music Program – The Juilliard School The John N. Stern Scholarship - Aspen Music Festival Various Performances at: Paul Hall - Juilliard - New York Alice Tully Hall - New York City College - New York Berkshire Performing Arts Center, National Music Center - Lenox, MA WGBH Radio - Boston Reading Musical Foundation Museum Concert Series - Reading, PA Cancer Care Benefit Concert - Princeton, NJ Nancy Goldberg - Director Educational Background M.A. Harvard University
    [Show full text]
  • Appetite for Autumn 34Th Street Style Knicks & Nets
    NOV 2014 NOV ® MUSEUMS | Knicks & Nets Knicks 34th Street Style Street 34th Restaurants offering the flavors of Fall NBA basketball tips-off in New York City York New in tips-off basketball NBA Appetite For Autumn For Appetite Styles from the world's brands beloved most BROADWAY | DINING | ULTIMATE MAGAZINE FOR NEW YORK CITY FOR NEW YORK MAGAZINE ULTIMATE SHOPPING NYC Monthly NOV2014 NYCMONTHLY.COM VOL. 4 NO.11 44159RL_NYC_MONTHLY_NOV.indd All Pages 10/7/14 5:18 PM SAMPLE SALE NOV 8 - NOV 16 FOR INFO VISIT: ANDREWMARC.COM/SAMPLESALE 1OOO EXCLUSIVES • 1OO DESIGNERS • 1 STORE Contents Cover Photo: Woolworth Building Lobby © Valerie DeBiase. Completed in 1913 and located at 233 Broadway in Manhattan’s financial district, The Woolworth building is an NYC landmark and was at the time the world’s tallest building. Its historic, ornate lobby is known for its majestic, vaulted ceiling, detailed sculptures, paintings, bronze fixtures and grand marble staircase. While generally not open to the public, this neo-Gothic architectural gem is now open for tours with limited availability. (woolworthtours.com) FEATURES Top 10 things to do in November Encore! Encore! 16 26 Feel the energy that only a live performance in the Big Apple can produce 34th Street Style 18 Make your way through this stretch of Midtown, where some of the biggest outposts from global NYC Concert Spotlight brands set up shop 28 Fitz and the Tantrums Appetite For Autumn 30 The Crowd Goes Wild 20 As the seasons change, so do these restaurant's NBA basketball tips off in NYC menus,
    [Show full text]
  • Download This Issue
    The Harlem Community Newspapers, Inc. Connecting Harlem, Queens, Brooklyn and The Bronx BRONX NEWSCOMMUNITY “Good News You Can Use” Vol. 26 No. 32 August 12, 2021 – August 18, 2021 FREE “Lucky to Be Here HARLEM WEEK Kicks Off With “at the Longwood Gallery see page 5 A BLAST at "A GREAT DAY" see pages 14-15 Black Playwrights Will Abound On Broadway! Hoorah! see page 9 HARLEM WEEK Senior Citizens Day see page 16 Follow Harlem Community Newspapers on Social Media! VISIT OUR WEBSITE: www.harlemcommunitynews.com Facebook: @HarlemCommunityNewspapers Twitter: @HCNewspapers Instagram: Harlem_community_newspapers YouTube: harlemnewsinc HARLEM COMMUNITY NEWSPAPERS CONTENTS HARLEM COMMUNITY NEWS “Good news you can use” BROOKLYN COMMUNITY NEWS BRONX COMMUNITY NEWS NITY COMMU Connecting Harlem, Queens, Brooklyn and The South Bronx QUEENS COMMUNITY NEWS The Harlem News Group, Inc. FREE Free copies distributed in your community weekly Harlem“Good News You CanNews Use” July 24–July 30, 2014 Vol. 14 No. 29 EEK M Wpage 16 The Harlem News Group, Inc. LE Connecting Harlem, Queens, Brooklyn and The South Bronx IN THIS ISSUE: INSIDE AR UE: H Calendar of Events THIS ISS Bronx News Community 3 Focus 12 COMMUNITY Vol. 14 No. 28 “Good News You Can Use” Education 4 Travel 13 INSIDE THIS ISSUE July 17 - July 23, 2014 PAT STEVENSON Soul Food and eet : Op Ed Editorial 6 Urbanology 14 African Cuisine M at Jacob Restaurant page 12 FREE Real Estate 7 Wellness 15 GOOD NEWS Calendar 8 Games 16 Denny Moe’s YOU CAN USE! “Cutting For A Cure” page 14 Events 9 Literary Corner 17 Romeo & Juliet – Free at Riverbank Park It was certainly “A Great Day” page 10 Photos from HARLEM WEEK 2013 page 8 Classified 18 OF EVENTS in Harlem this past Sunday as we ALENDAR Y C /harlemnewsinc celebrated the HARLEM WEEK NIT Capital One COMMU Student Banker @harlemnewsinc Program event at Grants Tomb.
    [Show full text]
  • Memories of New York Is Your One-Stop-Shop for Holiday Decorations
    Issue No. 2 Fall/Winter MEMORIES 2010 TM TM Of New York NEWSLETTER ~ 25th Anniversary Specials ~ Welcome ~~ Bienvenidos ~~ Bienvenue ~ Willkommen ~~ Benvenuto ~~ Bem-vindo Memories of New York is your one-stop-shop for holiday decorations. We have thousands of keepsake ornaments for sale all year ‘round, each one beautiful and Happy Holidays unique. From classic Santa Claus to officially licensed Elvis Presley, Betty Boop, I & Happy New Love Lucy, Wizard of Oz, Sex & the City, and more, we are sure to have something that will make your holiday a special one. Year From Beautiful NYC 16-Month Calendar – only $2.85 each (reg. $11.99) New York City! Novelty Giant Pen – only $0.95 each (reg. $4.99) We at Memories of Picture Frames – only $2.85 each (reg. $9.99) NYC Firefighter Picture Frame – only $0.95 each (reg. $3.99) New York would like Quality Metal Keychains – only $0.95 each (reg. $4.99) to wish everyone a Handcrafted Ashtrays & Cardholders – only $0.85 each (reg. $7.99) happy and healthy Shot Glasses – only $0.95 each (reg. $3.99) Mugs – only $1.95 each (reg. $4.99) holiday season! NYC Playing Cards – only $0.95 each (reg. $4.99) Thank you all for the overwhelmingly positive response to the first issue of 20 Postcards – $1 (only pre-packaged) the Memories of New York Newsletter! Your feedback means a lot to us. We hope that this new Fall/Winter issue will be just as enjoyable and informative, All while supplies last! Remember to ask for your free gift with purchase! Certain restrictions apply, ask for details.
    [Show full text]
  • News Release
    NEWS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE AUGUST WILSON’S STUNNING “FENCES” IS AS TIMELY AS IT IS POWERFUL, JAN. 16-FEB. 6 TUCSON, Ariz. (Jan. 6, 2016): Arizona Theatre Company celebrates the new year with a great American classic in August Wilson’s stunning, Pulitzer-Prize winning play, Fences. A vivid, heartfelt exploration of the African-American experience set in the 1950’s, the story remains strikingly relevant today. Performances begin at the Temple of Music & Art, 333 S. Scott Ave., on Jan. 16 and run through Feb. 6. I. Michael and Beth Kasser are Arizona Theatre Company’s 2015-16 Season Sponsors. The Stonewall Foundation is the Production Sponsor. Perhaps the best known of Wilson’s plays and winner of the Tony Award for Best Play, Fences tells the gripping story of sanitation worker Troy Maxson, a star baseball player whose career was blunted by the racism prevalent in pre-Jackie Robinson America. Feeling his world rapidly changing, Troy builds a fence to protect what is familiar and hold off what threatens. Muscular and lyrical, filled with some of the greatest characters and scenes in American Drama, this August Wilson blockbuster shows what can happen when a strong man is robbed of his dreams. Fences, the searing story of a man who stepped up to the plate too many times only to go down swinging, is as American as baseball itself. Called “stunning, explosive and tender” (The Seattle Times), Fences is “August Wilson at his finest” (Boston Herald). “Time has enhanced the luster of the play and it stands apart thanks to its distinctive lyricism and theatricality and its unforgettable central character.
    [Show full text]
  • Empire-State-Bldg.Pdf
    I{est Dominating the westward foreground is the dramatic black spike of ()ne Penn Plaza rising above the Madison Square Garden sports entertainment complex, and to its immediate right, the sprawling Jacob Javits Convention Center. Just beyond, the retired World War Il aircnaft carrier, Intrepid, houses the Air and Space Museum. From this area ferry services Iink Manhattan with New Jersey in minutes, while fleets of excursion craft stand by for sightseeing trips and dinner cruises around the island, or for day-long trips up the Hudson. Across the Hudson the New Jersey landscape stretches out past Newark lnternational Airport to the gently rolling hills of the Ramapo Mountains and beyond to the resort and vacation playgrounds of Pennsylvania's Pocono Mountains, South To the south the City takes on a Iess lofty character, where many of its historical buildings are dwarfed by the soaring Wall Street structures. Visible in the center foreground is the appropriately- named Flatiron Building, and south from there the elegant Woolworth Building, once the tallest building in the world at only 60 floors. To the right in Upper New York Bay stands the Great Lady herself, the Statue of Liberty, and the adjoining EIIis Island, where millions of immigrants first stood on American soil. To the lower left, the Manhattan and Brooklyn Bridges appear as miniatures against the backdrop of the majestic span of the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge joining the boroughs of Brooklyn and Staten lsland. I Ncrth Far below in the foreground to the right stands the shimmering Chrysler Building, the impressive Metlife Building (formerly the Pan Am Building) bordering nearby.
    [Show full text]
  • 2020 August Issue Blackwell's Almanac
    Vol. VI, No. 3, 2020 Edward Steichen’s famous 1904 nighttime photo of the Flatiron Building. See “The Flatiron Building: From ‘Likely to Fall Down’ to Historic Landmark,” p. 2. Image: Public domain/Wikimedia. !1 Vol. VI, No. 3, 2020 Contents The Flatiron Building: P. 2 The Flatiron From “Likely to Fall Down” to Historic Building: From “Likely Landmark to Fall Down” to Historic Landmark It’s been photographed, painted, filmed and lionized. It has become P. 4 Letter from RIHS an almost universally recognized symbol of New York City, used by President, Judith Berdy TV and movie directors to “establish” their story’s Big Apple location. And it polls as one of city residents’ most beloved buildings. P. 5 What Ever Happened to the But it wasn’t always that way. Automat? After a succession of investors, the still empty “flatiron” site, as the P. 7 Face It. You Were triangular parcel was known, was purchased in 1901 for $2 million to Breaking the Law! situate a new headquarters building for the Fuller Company. The firm, P. 8 100 Years of Votes which was operating out of Chicago at the time, was the first true for Women general contractor, meaning that it dealt with all aspects of building construction. What’s more, it specialized in erecting skyscrapers… and, located at the intersection of Fifth Avenue, Broadway and 23rd Street, the company’s planned edifice would in fact be the first skyscraper above 14th Street. Before an 1892 change in NYC building codes, naturally fire-resistant masonry was the required construction material.
    [Show full text]
  • 3. New York City's Theater
    Diplomarbeit Titel der Diplomarbeit Stage New York City Verfasserin Katja Moritz Angestrebter akademischer Grad Magistra der Philosophie (Mag. phil) Wien, im Oktober 2008 Studienkennzahl lt. Studienblatt: A 317 Studienrichtung lt. Studienblatt: Theater-, Film- und Medienwissenschaft Betreuerin/Betreuer: Ao. Univ.- Prof. Dr. Brigitte Marschall INDEX__________________________________________ 1. PREFACE AND INTRODUCTION …………………………………. Seite 4 2. INTRO: BIG CITY LIFE ……………………………………………... Seite 6 2.1. Introduction New York …………………………………………. Seite 8 3. NEW YORK CITY‘S THEATER ……………………………………. Seite 12 3.1.1. Broadway, Off And Off-Off Broadway: Differences ...………….. Seite 13 4. BROADWAY …………………………………………………………... Seite 16 4.1. New York City’s Broadway – What Is It About? ……………….. Seite 18 4.2. Broadway History: Changes …………………………………….. Seite 21 4.2.1. Early Attraction ……………………………………………………... Seite 21 4.2.2. Broadway 1900 – 1950 ……………………………………………… Seite 24 4.2.3. Broadway 1950 – 2008 ……………………………………………… Seite 26 4.3. Commercial Production: Broadway ……………………………... Seite 27 4.3.1. Broadway Producer: Money Makes The (Broadway) World Go Round ………………….. Seite 29 4.3.2. Critics: Thumbs Up? ………………………………………………… Seite 32 4.3.3. Musical ……………………………………………………………… Seite 33 4.4. Competition Calls For Promotion ……………………………….. Seite 35 4.4.1. Federal Theatre Project 1935 – 1939 ………………………………... Seite 36 4.4.2. Theatre Development Fund TDF ……………………………………. Seite 37 4.4.3. I Love NY …………………………………………………………… Seite 38 4.5. Reflection ………………………………………………………... Seite 39 5. OFF AND OFF-OFF BROADWAY DEVELOPMENT ……………. Seite 41 5.1. Showplace Greenwich Village And East Village ……………….. Seite 41 5.2. Showplace Williamsburg, Brooklyn …………………………….. Seite 45 1 6. OFF BROADWAY AND OFF-OFF BROADWAY – WHAT IS IT ABOUT? ………………………………………………... Seite 47 6.1. First Steps Into Off Broadway …………………………………… Seite 48 6.2. The Real Off Broadway – The 1950s …………………………….
    [Show full text]