Difference between revisions of "La Comédie de Reims [Reims] (Q17404)"

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theatre building in Reims, France

(‎Created claim: Carthalia ID (P264): 3640, #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1735319401809)
(‎Added qualifier: Source (P63): CARTHALIA (Q495), #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1757591661939)
 
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Property / Note
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Built 1966 by Jean Le Couteur and Jacques Herbe. Provisionally opened 1 Oct 1966, officially opened 28 Oct 1969 as Maison de la Culture André Malraux, named in honour of the French writer and politician, André Malraux (1901-1976). Later renamed La Comédie de Reims. The complex contains a theatre hall (850 seats), a studio theatre (198 seats, originally a cinema hall), and a multi-media library. (English)
Property / Note: Built 1966 by Jean Le Couteur and Jacques Herbe. Provisionally opened 1 Oct 1966, officially opened 28 Oct 1969 as Maison de la Culture André Malraux, named in honour of the French writer and politician, André Malraux (1901-1976). Later renamed La Comédie de Reims. The complex contains a theatre hall (850 seats), a studio theatre (198 seats, originally a cinema hall), and a multi-media library. (English) / rank
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Normal rank
Property / Note: Built 1966 by Jean Le Couteur and Jacques Herbe. Provisionally opened 1 Oct 1966, officially opened 28 Oct 1969 as Maison de la Culture André Malraux, named in honour of the French writer and politician, André Malraux (1901-1976). Later renamed La Comédie de Reims. The complex contains a theatre hall (850 seats), a studio theatre (198 seats, originally a cinema hall), and a multi-media library. (English) / qualifier
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Latest revision as of 13:08, 11 September 2025

theatre building in Reims, France
  • La Comédie de Reims
Language Label Description Also known as
English
La Comédie de Reims [Reims]
theatre building in Reims, France
  • La Comédie de Reims

Statements

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49°14'58.920"N, 4°1'13.850"E
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Reims - Comédie.JPG
3,264 × 2,448; 2.81 MB
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Built 1966 by Jean Le Couteur and Jacques Herbe. Provisionally opened 1 Oct 1966, officially opened 28 Oct 1969 as Maison de la Culture André Malraux, named in honour of the French writer and politician, André Malraux (1901-1976). Later renamed La Comédie de Reims. The complex contains a theatre hall (850 seats), a studio theatre (198 seats, originally a cinema hall), and a multi-media library. (English)
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3, chaussée Bocquaine
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51000
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1966
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Timeline

 

Wikidata