Menu

Belasco Theatre

1

New York City

Belasco Theatre

The Belasco Theatre is a legitmate Broadway theatre located at 111 West 44th Street in midtown-Manhattan.<br> Designed by architect George Keister for impresario David Belasco, the interior featured Tiffany lighting and ceiling panels, rich woodwork and expansive murals, and a ten-room duplex penthouse apartment that Belasco utilized as combination living quarters/office space. <br>Technically it was outfitted with the most advanced stagecraft tools available, including extensive lighting rigs, a hydraulics system, and vast wing and fly space.<br> It opened as the Stuyvesant Theatre on October 16, 1907 with the musical A Grand Army Man with Antoinette Perry. Three years later Belasco attached his own name to the venue. After his death in 1931, it was leased first by actress Katharine Cornell and then playwright Elmer Rice. The Shuberts bought it in 1949 and leased it to NBC for three years before returning it to legitimate use.<br> This theater is the subject of an urban legend that David Belasco's ghost haunts the theater every night. Some performers in the shows that played there have even claimed to have spotted him or other ghosts during performances. <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org" target="new">Source</a>

2

Palace Theater

3

American Airlines Theatre

4

Eugene O'Neill Theatre

5

Gershwin Theatre

6

Ambassador Theatre

7

Apollo Theater

8

Circle in the Square Theatre

9

Brooklyn Academy of Music

10

Broadhurst Theatre

11

Marquis Theatre

12

New Amsterdam Theatre

13

Walter Kerr Theatre

14

John Golden Theatre

15

Studio 54

16

Minskoff Theatre

17

Ethel Barrymore Theatre

18

Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre

19

St. James Theatre

20

Nederlander Theatre

21

Longacre Theatre

22

Winter Garden Theatre

23

Lyceum Theatre

24

Vineyard Theatre

25

Shubert Theatre

26

Majestic Theatre

27

Beacon Theatre

28

Music Box Teatre

29

Richard Rodgers Theatre

30

Vivian Beaumont Theater

1

Dutchess County

Center for Performing Arts

2

Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Ar