That will depend on the style manual being followed. It is used for Broadway shows in some of them, others use italics or underlines.
Generally, works that can stand alone (novels, plays, movie titles) are italicized or underlined. The APA Publication Manual states that you would need to underline, but it is commonly accepted that you may italicize when typing and including such a title. Shorter pieces (TV show episodes, poems, etc) are where one would use quotation marks.
The Broadway Theatre in New York was built in 1924 and opened on Christmas Day. It was originally called B.S. Moss's Colony Theatre. It operated under many different names before becoming the Broadway. The theater actually sits on Broadway Street, unlike many Broadway theaters.
Chicago,Fame,Jersey boys,Guys and dolls,Wicked
Famous balle women dancers in 70s and 80s
If you're asking for the name of the Cast Member who plays Peter Pan at Disneyland ...There are several of them. Disney doesn't reveal their names, and forbids the Cast Members from talking about it outside of work. Disney wants Disneyland guests to think of Peter Pan as Peter Pan, and that's an end of it.
No you do not
Yes.
No, Italics.
Yes, you can put quotation marks around the names of specific programs or software applications when mentioning them in written text to distinguish them from surrounding content.
Company names are not underlined, nor are quotation marks put around them. They are written as normal proper nouns unless there are underlines or quotation marks in the name itself.
Quotation marks never indicate emphasis. I would leave them off names.
No. You should use italics (where possible) for poems, books, movies, or plays, and "quotation marks" around article titles or chapter names.
Generally, company names are not italicized or enclosed in quotation marks. Product names are often capitalized but can be italicized or enclosed in quotation marks when emphasizing them in a sentence.
quotation marks
Yes, you do.
Noah is not Selena Gomez
You do not put band names in quotation marks. However, you do capitalize the band/artist. Correct: Skillet Incorrect: "Skillet"