1000 W. Olympic Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90015
(213) 763-6071
From the producers of terrifying films like Paranormal Activity, Insidious and Sinister, experience an intense tour through one of Los Angeles's most haunted locations. Explore the corridors of this possessed theater whose stage was home to one of the world's most twisted dark art magicians. The building is being opened to the public for the first time since a tragic accident forced it to close… Will you be able to handle the terrors within these doors? For families and those afraid of the dark, visit us this Saturday the 27th from 2 - 5pm to experience a lights on tour that is less intense.
L.A. Live is an entertainment complex in downtown Los Angeles, California, adjacent to the Staples Center. L.A. Live cost approximately and was developed by Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG), Wachovia Corp, Azteca Corp, and investment firm MacFarlane Partners with help from Los Angeles taxpayers. The architectural firm responsible for the master plan and phase two buildings was Baltimore-based RTKL Associates. It has of apartments, ballrooms, bars, concert theatres, restaurants, movie theaters, and a 54-story hotel and condominium tower on a site. The complex became home to AEG and Herbalife headquarters in December 2008.FeaturesNokia PlazaNokia is a open-air plaza that serves as the central meeting place for L.A. Live. The plaza provides a broadcast venue featuring giant LED screens as well as a red carpet site for special events. Nokia Plaza hosted the first WWE SummerSlam Axxess event on the weekend beginning August 22, 2009, leading up to the 2009 SummerSlam event on August 23 at Staples Center. On June 24, 2010, the plaza was the location for the official red carpet premiere of The Twilight Saga: Eclipse.
This page is dedicated to the shows: Supernatural,The Vampire Diaries,The Originals,& Trueblood.We hope you would like our page and join this awesome fanbase!!! Owner/ *SuperVamp* Admins ~Christina~ xDebx ~Sammy's Girl ~Samifer~ ~CoCo~ -KAZ2Y5 ~Sammy's Girl ~Charlie www.facebook.com/SupernaturalTVD30 is a fanpage dedicated to the TV shows "Supernatural" and "The Vampire Diaries"and "Trueblood".www.facebook.com/SupernaturalTVD30 doesn't claim to own any of the content in this page. All pictures are copyrighted to their respected owners and are here for fan purposes only, NO copyright infrigment intended. Site Disclaimer No copyright infringement is intended by the operators of this website. This website, and all its contents relating to “Supernatural”, is not authorized by The WB. “Supernatural” is the property of WarnerBros & The CW, to which this site is in no way affiliated with or endorsed by. All contents are copyrighted to their respective owners and are posted on this site for entertainment purposes only. This is only a non-profit fansite for HBO True Blood. We claim no ownership of any of the images used and copyright infringement is certainly not intended in any way. If you own any of the images on this site and would like them removed, please contact us,to be credited for the image.
You could describe it as “haunting, mysterious, over the top, rococo, distressed, gothic, renaissance deco, cool, other worldly, kitsch, beguiling….” and you still would not quite capture the essence of downtown LA’s own unique and enigmatic Tower Theatre, situated at 800 South Broadway (at 8th Street) in historic downtown Los Angeles. Once dubbed, “The World’s Most Beautiful Theatre,” the Tower was designed by prodigious 28-year-old architect Simeon “S.” Charles Lee, and built by H.L. Gumbiner on a plot of land measuring only 150 feet long and 50 feet wide. It opened to much fanfare on October 12th, 1927 as the first movie theatre in Los Angeles built specifically for ‘talkies” with the premier of “The Gingham Girl,” featuring George Arthur and Lois Wilson, and was fully equipped with both a mighty Style 216 Wurlitzer 2/10 theatre organ, a musical contraption with ten ranks of pipes in two chambers, and a Vitaphone™ (a name derived from both Latin and Greek, respectively, for 'living' and 'sound') the then state of the art, analog sound on disc system that synced the sound of a spinning phonograph recording with a separate projected moving picture. The Tower was also the first theatre in Los Angeles to have refrigerated air conditioning, and patrons were invited to gleefully look through a window built into the balcony stairs to marvel at the mechanics of its inner workings. In modern times, the Tower has hosted artists such as Glass Candy, Doe Eye, Chromatics, Chvrches, Jessie Ware (upcoming) and events by Filter, The Edwardian Ball, Vox Media, and Live Nation. The Tower Theatre is a designated a Historic-Cultural Landmark, and is included in the National Register of Historic Places. For Tower Theatre event inquiries, please contact: Paul Assimacopoulos Programming/Events Director Broadway Theatre Group: Palace, Los Angeles, Tower Theatres ph: 213-488-2009 email: [email protected] Theatre Manager and Location Filming: Edward Baney office: 213-629-2939 Architectural Highlights: Full specs, seating chart, pricing available upon request. Capacity: 800 Stage: 23’5” from center of front edge to back wall. 18’ wide at back wall, widening to 30’ at front stage edge. 20’ height of concrete ceiling over stage. Power: 300amps/3 phase 200 amps for lights 100 amps for sound Interior Highlights: Edwards Spout’s interior auditorium design evokes the French Renaissance, while the almost religiously gorgeous lobby evokes both a Gothic cathedral and The Paris Opera House, with it’s hung, pearl strewn chandelier and arching stained glass window, which depicts a fleur-de-lis pattern draped with a coil of film strip, with the identical purple stripe found on early sound film stock. A spacious waiting room, which doubled as a ballroom, lay beneath the main floor. Exterior Highlights: Above the Tower’s shop windows on 8th street, on each of the window ledges, sits an Indian head-dress sculpture, and, atop each window, recline two nude figures—a discreetly draped masculine director wielding a camera and speaking into a megaphone; and a scantily clad starlet wearing beads and gazing into a mirror. False, decorative windows and Classical period detailing punctuate the highly decorated exterior sidewalls. To view a more extensive history of the Tower Theatre, please see the excellent web archives by Bill Counter: https://sites.google.com/site/downtownlosangelestheatres/tower also on FB: https://www.facebook.com/losangelestheatres And these other great historical resources: Los Angeles Historical Theatre Foundation http://www.lahtf.org LA Conservancy https://www.laconservancy.org Cinema Treasures http://cinematreasures.org
Hello. My name is Pedro Almodovar and I am a Spanish film director, screenwriter, producer and former actor. I became interested in film at the age of eight. In 1967 I moved to Madrid to become a filmmaker. Some of my films are Pepi, Luci, Bom, Dark Habits, Matador, and High Heels. I have worked with actresses and actors from Penelope Cruz, Cecilia Roth, Antonio Banderas and Fabio McNamara just to name a few. In my films viewers will notice a lot of parody and theatricality. Family, religion, authority, gender roles and sexual identities are a major part of my films too. I am now opening up my own studios and I invite anyone interested in acting to join. I hope to see you there. Here are links to articles about me: http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/a/pedro_almodovar/index.html http://www.theguardian.com/film/pedroalmodovar http://bombmagazine.org/article/1758/pedro-almod-var http://variety.com/2015/film/news/pedro-almodovar-sets-silencio-as-next-film-1201391678/ Here are links to some of my leading actresses: http://www.interviewmagazine.com/film/penelope-cruz/ http://www.nytimes.com/movies/person/61744/Cecilia-Roth http://zagria.blogspot.com/2012/02/antonia-san-juan-1961-actress-director.html#.VPa59Bd0zcs Here are links to my movie reviews: http://www.rogerebert.com/cast-and-crew/pedro-almodovar http://www.rottentomatoes.com/celebrity/pedro_almodovar/ http://www.avclub.com/review/tie-me-tie-me-down-one-pedro-almodovars-ickiest-mo-208181 http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2007/mar/01/the-women-of-pedro-almodovar/