Difference between revisions of "Union theater kurfürstendamm [Berlin] (Q14931)"
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(Created claim: Carthalia ID (P264): 1656, #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1735308743090) | (Created claim: Note (P44): Cinema, built 1912-1913 as Union-Palast by Nentwich and Simon. The complex included a 850-seat cinema and a concert café. Opened with Max Reinhardt's movie Die Insel der Seligen. 1924 renamed UFA-Palast, later UFA-Theater. 1945 renovated and renamed Haus Wien (also known as Filmbühne Wien). 1953 exterior and interior rebuilding. 1979-1983 conversion into seven smaller cinema halls. Closed 26 Apr 2000. Subsequently used as an art gallery and (sin...) | ||
| Property / Note | |||
| + | Cinema, built 1912-1913 as Union-Palast by Nentwich and Simon. The complex included a 850-seat cinema and a concert café. Opened with Max Reinhardt's movie Die Insel der Seligen. 1924 renamed UFA-Palast, later UFA-Theater. 1945 renovated and renamed Haus Wien (also known as Filmbühne Wien). 1953 exterior and interior rebuilding. 1979-1983 conversion into seven smaller cinema halls. Closed 26 Apr 2000. Subsequently used as an art gallery and (since 2013) as a retail store. (English) | ||
| Property / Note: Cinema, built 1912-1913 as Union-Palast by Nentwich and Simon. The complex included a 850-seat cinema and a concert café. Opened with Max Reinhardt's movie Die Insel der Seligen. 1924 renamed UFA-Palast, later UFA-Theater. 1945 renovated and renamed Haus Wien (also known as Filmbühne Wien). 1953 exterior and interior rebuilding. 1979-1983 conversion into seven smaller cinema halls. Closed 26 Apr 2000. Subsequently used as an art gallery and (since 2013) as a retail store. (English) / rank | |||
| + | Normal rank | ||
Revision as of 13:06, 11 September 2025
Theatre building in Berlin, Germany, opened 1913
- Union theater kurfürstendamm
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | Union theater kurfürstendamm [Berlin] | Theatre building in Berlin, Germany, opened 1913 |
|
Statements
Cinema, built 1912-1913 as Union-Palast by Nentwich and Simon. The complex included a 850-seat cinema and a concert café. Opened with Max Reinhardt's movie Die Insel der Seligen. 1924 renamed UFA-Palast, later UFA-Theater. 1945 renovated and renamed Haus Wien (also known as Filmbühne Wien). 1953 exterior and interior rebuilding. 1979-1983 conversion into seven smaller cinema halls. Closed 26 Apr 2000. Subsequently used as an art gallery and (since 2013) as a retail store. (English)
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Berlin 80
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1913
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Kurfürstendamm 26
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2011
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10719
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