• DuMont Royal Theater (also known as Royal Playhouse) is an American dramatic anthology television series which ran on the now-defunct DuMont Television...
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  • (Oct–Dec 1951) Dark of Night (1952–1953) Drama at Eight (July 1953) DuMont Royal Theater (1951–1952) Ethel Barrymore Theatre (Sept–Dec 1956) Frontier Theatre...
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  • Drama at Eight (1953) DuMont Royal Theater (1951–52) The DuPont Show of the Month (1957–61) The DuPont Show of the Week (1961–64) The DuPont Show with June...
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  • heavily viewed program on television, NBC's Texaco Star Theater. Given the competition, DuMont's Tuesday night public-affairs programming attracted virtually...
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  • giving [CBS] a strong weapon against NBC's flashy comedy-variety hours". DuMont, too, avoided flashy comedy series when in February 1952, in desperation...
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  • Yiddish Arts Theater (1943), and renamed the Adelphi Theater on April 20, 1944, when it was acquired by The Shubert Organization. It became a DuMont Television...
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  • Thumbnail for Palais-Royal
    the theater in 1900. The theater today can hold 2,000 spectators. Statues of cariatides decorate boxes next to the stage The Théâtre du Palais-Royal The...
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  • Television Broadcasters "DuMont buys rights to pro title contest". Milwaukee Journal. May 22, 1951. p. 6, part 2. "Pro Football and DuMont Sign a $475,000 TV...
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  • Thumbnail for Ronald Speirs
    Ste. Come-du-Mont and to hold position while regimental headquarters coordinated a rolling barrage shelling 15 targets near St. Marie-du-Mont. Before the...
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  • Greysolon, located in "The Plateau" borough of the city (known as Le Plateau-Mont Royal in French). The avenue became quite popular with both residents and tourists...
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  • Thumbnail for Palace of Versailles
    Ambassadors' Staircase. In 1748, Louis XV began construction of a palace theater, the Royal Opera of Versailles at the northernmost end of the palace, but completion...
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  • Thumbnail for Ethel Barrymore
    series Ethel Barrymore Theatre, produced by the DuMont Television Network and presented on the DuMont flagship station WABD just as the network was folding...
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  • Cinéma L'Amour (category Adult movie theaters)
    L'Amour is an adult movie theatre on Saint Laurent Boulevard in the Plateau-Mont-Royal, Montreal, Canada. The building it occupies opened in 1914 as the Globe...
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  • Marie Baptiste née Dumont or Du Mont (8 February 1733 Bordeaux, France - died after 1786) was a French stage actress and singer. She is most known for...
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  • Thumbnail for Louise Dumont
    Louise Dumont (née Louise Maria Hubertine Heynen; 22 February 1862, in Cologne – 16 May 1932, in Düsseldorf) was a German actress and theater director...
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  • Thumbnail for Paris in the 16th century
    as a royal palace since the beginning of the fourteenth century and had enjoyed favor under Charles V of France, who paid the architect Raymond du Temple...
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  • 1918 2001 poet Margaret Duley 1894 1968 novelist The Eyes of the Gull Dawn Dumont novelist, short stories Nobody Cries at Bingo, Rose's Run Dave Duncan 1933...
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  • Thumbnail for Amanda Randolph
    to star in a regularly scheduled network television show, appearing in DuMont's The Laytons. Born in Louisville, Kentucky, Randolph was the daughter of...
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  • from DuMont's television network (with the exception of KTLA, which ran DuMont programs for one year from 1947 to 1948), and competed against DuMont's affiliates...
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  • Thumbnail for Paris in the 17th century
    at the theater of the Palais-Royal on February 28, 1645, followed in 1647 by the more famous Orfeo of Luigi Rossi at the Petit-Bourbon theater next to...
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  • DuMont; the Saturday afternoon package moved to NBC for the 1954–55 season, mainly because NBC could clear the games on far more stations that DuMont...
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  • Thumbnail for Pointe du Hoc
    seawatching at Pointe du Hoc – for visitors interested in sea birds at this site Royal Marines Supporting the Rangers at Pointe Du Hoc 49°23′45″N 0°59′20″W...
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  • Thumbnail for Melvyn Douglas
    in the DuMont detective show Steve Randall (Hollywood Off Beat) which then moved to CBS. In the summer of 1953, he briefly hosted the DuMont game show...
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  • Thumbnail for René Auberjonois
    being replaced by Maurice LaMarche), Azmuth on Ben 10: Omniverse, Renard Dumont on The Legend of Tarzan, Justice League Unlimited, Max Steel, Fantastic...
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  • Thumbnail for Catacombs of Paris
    arrondissement. During 2004, police discovered a fully equipped movie theater in an area of the catacombs underneath the Trocadéro. It was equipped with...
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  • Thumbnail for Rue de la Chaussée-d'Antin
    gave way to the Théâtre du Vaudeville in 1869, and then the Paramount Opéra cinema theater in 1927. The main hall of the theater corresponds to the 'grand...
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  • Thumbnail for Louvre Palace
    such as tournaments, games, balls and theater were a core part of court life at the time when the Louvre was a royal residence. On the night of 5 February...
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  • Thumbnail for Charles-Caïus Renoux
    purchased before the exhibit closed. L'interieur de l’Église Saint-Etienne-du-Mont à Paris was acquired by the state and installed at the Luxembourg Palace...
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  • Thumbnail for Jardin du Luxembourg
    Pantheon. The garden in the late nineteenth century contained a marionette theater, a music kiosk, greenhouses, an apiary (or bee-house); an orangerie also...
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  • incomplete, non-exhaustive list of notable people in film, television and theater who are identified as atheist. Douglas Adams (1952–2001): British radio...
    139 KB (17,097 words) - 17:35, 21 April 2024