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Chickering Hall (1901-1912) was an auditorium in Boston, Massachusetts, located on Huntington Avenue in the Back Bay.〔Chickering Hall, no.239 Huntington Ave. 〕 It stood adjacent to Horticultural Hall. Tenants included the Emerson College of Oratory〔Advertisement in Atlantic Monthly, June 1910〕 and D.M. Shooshan's "Ladies' and Gents' Cafe." In 1912 it became the St. James Theatre, and later the Uptown Theatre. The building existed until 1963, when it was demolished.〔Bostonian Society. (Photograph of Uptown Theater ), 239 Huntington Street. View of the Prudential Center Tower, ca. 1962-1963. "Demolition (replaced by Christian Science Center). Originally the Chickering Hall (built 1900-1901), later Saint James Theater."〕 ==Performances== * Opening concert, with Antoinette Szumowska, Pol Plançon, Kneisel Quartet〔"Chickering Hall opening," Boston Globe, January 27, 1901; "Brilliant audience: auspicious opening of new Chickering Hall," Boston Globe, Feb. 9, 1901〕〔(The commemoration of the founding of the house of Chickering & Sons ) upon the eightieth anniversary of the event, 1823-1903. Boston: Chickering & Sons, 1904〕 * Lucy Gates, soprano〔Boston Globe, Feb. 16, 1902〕 * Florizel, boy violinist〔Boston Globe, Feb. 16, 1902〕 * Ossip Gabrilowitsch, pianist〔Boston Globe, March 15, 1903〕 * Merchant of Venice, with Ben Greet English Co.〔Boston Globe, Feb. 6, 1904〕 * W. B. Yeats plays, with Margaret Wycherly〔Boston Globe, Nov. 26, 1904〕 * Beatrice Herford〔Boston Evening Transcript, April 14, 1910〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Chickering Hall, Boston (1901)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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