Bernard B Jacobs Theatre is a Broadway theater at 242 West 45th Street in the Theater District of Midtown Manhattan in New York City.
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Bernard B Jacobs Theatre is a Broadway theater at 242 West 45th Street in the Theater District of Midtown Manhattan in New York City.
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The Royale Theatre was restored as a legitimate theater under its original name in 1940.
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Bernard B Jacobs Theatre is on 242 West 45th Street, on the south sidewalk between Eighth Avenue and Broadway, near Times Square in the Theater District of Midtown Manhattan in New York City.
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Bernard B Jacobs Theatre, originally the Royale Theatre, was designed by Herbert J Krapp in a Spanish style and was constructed from 1926 to 1927 for the Chanin brothers.
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Royale Theatre subsequently recalled that he had been "humiliated" by having to use a separate door whenever he bought cheap seats in an upper balcony level.
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The opening of the Majestic, Masque, and Royale Theatre signified the westward extension of the traditional Broadway theater district, as well as an expansion of the Chanins' theatrical developments.
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Burns Mantle wrote for the New York Daily News that the Royale had "a handsome auditorium with a Willy Pogany interior, well proportioned stage, and the established atmosphere of a hospitable and well-run theatre".
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Later that year, the Royale Theatre had its first major hit, the Mae West play Diamond Lil.
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Under Shubert management, the Royale Theatre hosted Second Little Show in 1930, which was followed by Lew Leslie's Blackbirds and Stepping Sisters.
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The Irish group Abbey Royale Theatre Players started hosting repertory productions in November 1934, changing the shows every week.
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The Royale Theatre subsequently hosted several productions relocated from other theaters, including Flight to the West and The Corn Is Green in 1941.
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The Royale Theatre then hosted New Faces of 1952, which turned out to be the last popular Broadway revue for several years due to the growing popularity of television.
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In 1955, the Royale Theatre featured The Matchmaker, which was adapted from a flop but had 486 performances.
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The Royale Theatre additionally presented a four-week engagement of the Karmon Israeli Dancers in May 1963.
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The Royale Theatre hosted Child's Play in 1970 and Moonchildren in 1972.
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The Royale Theatre then hosted Duet for One with Anne Bancroft and Max von Sydow for a month, followed by Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, which ran for over a year.
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The Royale Theatre next presented the two-act show Song and Dance in 1985, which ran for 474 performances.
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London's Royal National Royale Theatre presented An Inspector Calls in 1994, which ran 454 performances.
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The National Actors Theatre was the next occupant of the Royale, presenting a revival of Inherit the Wind.
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The Royale Theatre's final production of the 1990s was a revival of The Price in 1999.
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Royale Theatre hosted a revival of the play Copenhagen in 2000, which ran 326 performances.
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Also in 2003, the Royale Theatre hosted the short-lived revivals Ma Rainey's Black Bottom and "Master Harold".
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The next year, the Royale Theatre held the productions A Raisin in the Sun and 'night, Mother.
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