Difference between revisions of "John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts [Washington] (Q18008)"
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| Property / GPS | |||||||||||
| - | 29°57'12.528"N, 90°4'15.924"W
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| Property / GPS: 29°57'12.528"N, 90°4'15.924"W / rank | |||||||||||
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| Property / Kunstenpunt Wiki Qid: Q192567 / rank | |||||||||||
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| Property / Carthalia ID: 4312 / rank | |||||||||||
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| Property / Preservation state: extant building / rank | |||||||||||
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| Property / Preservation state: Used as theatre today / rank | |||||||||||
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| + | Built 1964-1967 for the federal government as national center for the performing arts. Officiall opened 8 Sep 1971 as John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts. Named after President John F. Kennedy (1917-1963). In 2025 destroyed as an respectable arts center by a coup of President Donald Trump who was made president of the center's Board of Trustees, resulting in censorship of its programmes. - The complex contains three main theatres and several other halls: Opera House. Opened 5 Sep 1971 with Leonard Bernstein's Mass. Ca. 2200 seats. Concert Hall. Opened 9 Sep 1971 with a concert of the National Symphony Orchestra. 2442 seats. Eisenhower Theater. Opened 18 Oct 1971 with Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House. 1163 seats. Terrace Theater. Built in the late 1970s by Philip Johnson. 513 seats. Family Theater. Built 2005, replacing the American Film Institute Theater. Opened 9 Dec 2005. 324 seats. Theater Lab. 399 seats. Millennium Stage. (English) | ||||||||||
| Property / Note: Built 1964-1967 for the federal government as national center for the performing arts. Officiall opened 8 Sep 1971 as John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts. Named after President John F. Kennedy (1917-1963). In 2025 destroyed as an respectable arts center by a coup of President Donald Trump who was made president of the center's Board of Trustees, resulting in censorship of its programmes. - The complex contains three main theatres and several other halls: Opera House. Opened 5 Sep 1971 with Leonard Bernstein's Mass. Ca. 2200 seats. Concert Hall. Opened 9 Sep 1971 with a concert of the National Symphony Orchestra. 2442 seats. Eisenhower Theater. Opened 18 Oct 1971 with Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House. 1163 seats. Terrace Theater. Built in the late 1970s by Philip Johnson. 513 seats. Family Theater. Built 2005, replacing the American Film Institute Theater. Opened 9 Dec 2005. 324 seats. Theater Lab. 399 seats. Millennium Stage. (English) / rank | |||||||||||
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| Property / Note: Built 1964-1967 for the federal government as national center for the performing arts. Officiall opened 8 Sep 1971 as John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts. Named after President John F. Kennedy (1917-1963). In 2025 destroyed as an respectable arts center by a coup of President Donald Trump who was made president of the center's Board of Trustees, resulting in censorship of its programmes. - The complex contains three main theatres and several other halls: Opera House. Opened 5 Sep 1971 with Leonard Bernstein's Mass. Ca. 2200 seats. Concert Hall. Opened 9 Sep 1971 with a concert of the National Symphony Orchestra. 2442 seats. Eisenhower Theater. Opened 18 Oct 1971 with Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House. 1163 seats. Terrace Theater. Built in the late 1970s by Philip Johnson. 513 seats. Family Theater. Built 2005, replacing the American Film Institute Theater. Opened 9 Dec 2005. 324 seats. Theater Lab. 399 seats. Millennium Stage. (English) / qualifier | |||||||||||
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Latest revision as of 13:14, 11 September 2025
theatre building in Washington, USA
- John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
| Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
|---|---|---|---|
| English | John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts [Washington] | theatre building in Washington, USA |
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Statements
38°53'44.520"N, 77°3'21.240"W
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Built 1964-1967 for the federal government as national center for the performing arts. Officiall opened 8 Sep 1971 as John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts. Named after President John F. Kennedy (1917-1963). In 2025 destroyed as an respectable arts center by a coup of President Donald Trump who was made president of the center's Board of Trustees, resulting in censorship of its programmes. - The complex contains three main theatres and several other halls: Opera House. Opened 5 Sep 1971 with Leonard Bernstein's Mass. Ca. 2200 seats. Concert Hall. Opened 9 Sep 1971 with a concert of the National Symphony Orchestra. 2442 seats. Eisenhower Theater. Opened 18 Oct 1971 with Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House. 1163 seats. Terrace Theater. Built in the late 1970s by Philip Johnson. 513 seats. Family Theater. Built 2005, replacing the American Film Institute Theater. Opened 9 Dec 2005. 324 seats. Theater Lab. 399 seats. Millennium Stage. (English)
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2700 F St NW, Washington, DC 20566
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20566
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495
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1971
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