Difference between revisions of "City Theatre [Paris, FR] (Q8467)"

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Theatre building in Paris, France, opened in 1862

(‎Changed [en] label: City Theatre [Paris, FR])
(‎Added qualifier: Source (P63): CARTHALIA (Q495), #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1757591661939)
 
(12 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Property / GPS
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48°51'25.999"N, 2°20'53.002"E

Latitude48.857222222222
Longitude2.3480555555556
Precision1.0E-6
Globehttp://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q2
 
Property / GPS: 48°51'25.999"N, 2°20'53.002"E / rank
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Normal rank
 
Property / opening date
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1862
Timestamp+1862-01-01T00:00:00Z
Timezone+00:00
CalendarGregorian
Precision1 year
Before0
After0
 
Property / opening date: 1862 / rank
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Normal rank
 
Property / Capacity
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1

Amount1
Unit1
 
Property / Capacity: 1 / rank
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Property / Wikidata instance
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Property / Wikidata instance: Q57660343 / rank
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Property / Wikidata instance
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Property / Wikidata instance: Q24354 / rank
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Property / Kunstenpunt Wiki Qid
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Property / Kunstenpunt Wiki Qid: Q191678 / rank
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Property / Carthalia ID
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Property / Carthalia ID: 1389 / rank
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Property / Preservation state
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Property / Preservation state: extant building / rank
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Property / Preservation state
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Property / Preservation state: Used as theatre today / rank
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Property / Note
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Built 1860-1862 as Théâtre Lyrique by Gabriel Davioud (named after the Théâtre Lyrique founded at another site in 1852). Originally intended for opera performances. Damaged by fire resulting from acts of war in 1871. Subsequently restored, re-opened 1875 as Théâtre Historique. 1879 renamed Théâtre des Nations. 1883 renamed Théâtre Italien. 1885 renamed Théâtre de Paris. 1887-1898 home to the Opéra-Comique. 1898 renamed Théâtre Sarah-Bernhardt after the actress and theatre director, Sarah Bernhardt (1844-1923). 1936 renamed Théâtre du Peuple. 1941-1942 renovations by Charles Dullin. 1942 renamed Théâtre de la Cité. 1949 renamed Théâtre Sarah-Bernhardt. 1957 renamed Théâtre des Nations. 1967-1968 renovations and major interior rebuilding by Perrottet, Fabre, and Allio. 1968 renamed Théâtre de la Ville. Stage technology damaged by a fire in 1982. Subsequently restored. Re-opened 1 Nov 1983. - The building includes two theatre halls: Grand salle (originally 1700 seats, since 1968: 1033 seats) and Petite Salle (opened Nov 1996, 400 seats). Currently used for drama, dance, and popular entertainment performances. Ticket 12 Nov 1909 (English)
Property / Note: Built 1860-1862 as Théâtre Lyrique by Gabriel Davioud (named after the Théâtre Lyrique founded at another site in 1852). Originally intended for opera performances. Damaged by fire resulting from acts of war in 1871. Subsequently restored, re-opened 1875 as Théâtre Historique. 1879 renamed Théâtre des Nations. 1883 renamed Théâtre Italien. 1885 renamed Théâtre de Paris. 1887-1898 home to the Opéra-Comique. 1898 renamed Théâtre Sarah-Bernhardt after the actress and theatre director, Sarah Bernhardt (1844-1923). 1936 renamed Théâtre du Peuple. 1941-1942 renovations by Charles Dullin. 1942 renamed Théâtre de la Cité. 1949 renamed Théâtre Sarah-Bernhardt. 1957 renamed Théâtre des Nations. 1967-1968 renovations and major interior rebuilding by Perrottet, Fabre, and Allio. 1968 renamed Théâtre de la Ville. Stage technology damaged by a fire in 1982. Subsequently restored. Re-opened 1 Nov 1983. - The building includes two theatre halls: Grand salle (originally 1700 seats, since 1968: 1033 seats) and Petite Salle (opened Nov 1996, 400 seats). Currently used for drama, dance, and popular entertainment performances. Ticket 12 Nov 1909 (English) / rank
 +
Normal rank
Property / Note: Built 1860-1862 as Théâtre Lyrique by Gabriel Davioud (named after the Théâtre Lyrique founded at another site in 1852). Originally intended for opera performances. Damaged by fire resulting from acts of war in 1871. Subsequently restored, re-opened 1875 as Théâtre Historique. 1879 renamed Théâtre des Nations. 1883 renamed Théâtre Italien. 1885 renamed Théâtre de Paris. 1887-1898 home to the Opéra-Comique. 1898 renamed Théâtre Sarah-Bernhardt after the actress and theatre director, Sarah Bernhardt (1844-1923). 1936 renamed Théâtre du Peuple. 1941-1942 renovations by Charles Dullin. 1942 renamed Théâtre de la Cité. 1949 renamed Théâtre Sarah-Bernhardt. 1957 renamed Théâtre des Nations. 1967-1968 renovations and major interior rebuilding by Perrottet, Fabre, and Allio. 1968 renamed Théâtre de la Ville. Stage technology damaged by a fire in 1982. Subsequently restored. Re-opened 1 Nov 1983. - The building includes two theatre halls: Grand salle (originally 1700 seats, since 1968: 1033 seats) and Petite Salle (opened Nov 1996, 400 seats). Currently used for drama, dance, and popular entertainment performances. Ticket 12 Nov 1909 (English) / qualifier
 +

Latest revision as of 12:35, 11 September 2025

Theatre building in Paris, France, opened in 1862
  • City Theatre
Language Label Description Also known as
English
City Theatre [Paris, FR]
Theatre building in Paris, France, opened in 1862
  • City Theatre

Statements

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48°51'25.960"N, 2°20'53.228"E
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DSC 7199-Theattre-de-la-vil.jpg
2,173 × 1,621; 1.33 MB
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Built 1860-1862 as Théâtre Lyrique by Gabriel Davioud (named after the Théâtre Lyrique founded at another site in 1852). Originally intended for opera performances. Damaged by fire resulting from acts of war in 1871. Subsequently restored, re-opened 1875 as Théâtre Historique. 1879 renamed Théâtre des Nations. 1883 renamed Théâtre Italien. 1885 renamed Théâtre de Paris. 1887-1898 home to the Opéra-Comique. 1898 renamed Théâtre Sarah-Bernhardt after the actress and theatre director, Sarah Bernhardt (1844-1923). 1936 renamed Théâtre du Peuple. 1941-1942 renovations by Charles Dullin. 1942 renamed Théâtre de la Cité. 1949 renamed Théâtre Sarah-Bernhardt. 1957 renamed Théâtre des Nations. 1967-1968 renovations and major interior rebuilding by Perrottet, Fabre, and Allio. 1968 renamed Théâtre de la Ville. Stage technology damaged by a fire in 1982. Subsequently restored. Re-opened 1 Nov 1983. - The building includes two theatre halls: Grand salle (originally 1700 seats, since 1968: 1033 seats) and Petite Salle (opened Nov 1996, 400 seats). Currently used for drama, dance, and popular entertainment performances. Ticket 12 Nov 1909 (English)
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1862
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1862
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1,600
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Paris 83
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110 Rue Amelot
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circulaire
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25 May 1871Gregorian
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75004
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Timeline

 

Wikidata