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  Los Angeles Theater
 

Los Angeles Theater - Showcasing Great LA Talents

 
Los Angeles along with New York City is one of the United States' seats of American theater. Being the largest city in the state of California and the second largest in the whole of the United States, it is expected that it would produce lots of talented people. The city serves home to famous and struggling movie stars, directors, and writers. The Los Angeles theater scene is quite common even outside of the theater itself. Amidst the buzzing performers and tossing of movie tickets, are the great Los Angeles theaters built by great engineers and architects dating back in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
 

The Theater and Its Branches

 
The theater is where artists can express the different ways of using elements of speech, dance, gesture, and music. Artists are given the opportunity to isolate themselves in time and space and become another being for others to watch and inspire. Theater shows can be in the form of drama, musical, and comedy. Drama is the branch where speech is very much relevant. Musical shows mostly combine songs, music, spoken dialogue, and some dance routines, coupled with spectacular and colorful costumes and sets; a perfect example would be the Broadway musicals.
 

A List of Los Angeles Theaters

 
  1. The Ahmanson Theater. The theater was constructed in 1962 and opened for public five years after. It was generously donated by Robert H. Ahmanson and is now considered one among four locations comprising the Los Angeles Music Center. A lot of popular movie personalities started out in this Los Angeles theater and starred in dramas and musicals. It has a seating capacity of 1,600 to 2,100 and it has an all-year-round season ticket subscription, the largest one in the West Coast area.
  2. The Mark Taper Forum. This theater is named after Mark Taper, a known real estate developer, and is located on Bunker Hill. It has a seating capacity of 739 and was opened as the smallest branch of the Los Angeles Music Center in 1967. The building resembles the Carousel Theater of Disneyland.
  3. The Geffen Playhouse. This Los Angeles theater was originally built in 1929 and was purchased by the University of California, Los Angeles, (UCLA) in 1993. A non-profit performing theater, this is found in the Westwood area of the city. It offers five plays every season for its main stage and three to four plays on its second stage. Many known television and movie personalities are among the cast of the stage plays presented in this theater.
  4. The Kodak Theater is found on Hollywood Boulevard and has been the venue of the Annual Oscars Academy Awards since it opened in 2001. The theater was designed by the Rockwell Group with the Oscars as their inspiration so that it has one of the largest seating capacities among the many Los Angeles theaters in the whole of United States. The theater is obviously named after the Kodak Company, its sponsor who paid a whooping $75 million for its construction.
 
Child Actor LA is an institution where children can grow and acquire life skills. The institution has been working over most of the last two decades and most of the children appearing in the films, commercials and other TV shows are our graduates.

 
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