East Broadway Run Down was created on 1966-05-09.
Across the Universe is not on Broadway. It was a musical film with songs from the Beatles. Currently there are no plans to adapt it for a Broadway run.
Fame ran on Broadway for a total of one year. It appeared to be popular during its run and it lost no money. Many individuals enjoyed the Broadway version of the movie and tv series per noted reports.
never never
yes!
2yesrs
Latitude go side to side and longitude do up and down
I asked a friend of mine who is a Broadway expert. He suggested Michael Gruber. He was in the original run of the show on broadway, but not the original cast, and then he was in the revivial.
Lines of latitude circle the Earth in an east-west fashion. so no
when a show is "off Broadway it means that the show is still playing, but no longer playing in a Broadway theatre.This is not actually true. A show that is running off Broadway may or may not have ever been on Broadway. Many shows start off-broadway and get picked up to move into a Broadway theatre. And many more ONLY run off-broadway.
The Appalachian Mountains run fairly parallel to the East Coast of the US. The Rockies run down the West Coast.
None of them do. The 1 train (of the 1-2-3, the red line) runs up and down Broadway from 59th Street to 168th Street, but it is a local train. Above 168th Street, the 1 runs up St. Nicolas Avenue to its final stop in Manhattan, 191st Street. The 2 and the 3 (which are express) follow the same path as the 1 from Chambers Street to 96th Street, then veer east and run up the middle of Manhattan and into the Bronx. Below 59th Street, the 1-2-3 line runs up and down 7th Avenue, then 7th Avenue South, then Varick Street, then West Broadway. Then the 2 and 3 veer east to Brooklyn, and the 1 continues down Greenwich Street in Manhattan to its final stop, South Ferry.
Robert Stattel played Edgar in the 1968 Broadway production of King Lear.