Fox Theatre

Fox Theatre or Fox Theater or Fox Theater Building may refer to:

  • Fox Theatres, a defunct chain of movie theaters

in Canada

  • Fox Theatre (Toronto)

in the United States

  • Fox Theatre (Atlanta, Georgia)
  • Fox Tucson Theatre
  • Fox Theater (Bakersfield, California)
  • Fox Theatre (Fullerton, California)
  • Fox Theater, Westwood Village, Los Angeles, California
  • Fox Oakland Theatre
  • Pomona Fox Theater, Pomona, California
  • Riverside Fox Theater, Riverside, California
  • Visalia Fox Theatre, Visalia, California
  • Fox Theatre (Salinas, California)
  • Fox Theatre, the original name of Copley Symphony Hall, San Diego, California
  • Fox Theatre (San Francisco, California)
  • Fox Theatre (Boulder, Colorado)
  • Blue Fox Theatre, Grangeville, Idaho
  • Fox Theater (Hutchinson, Kansas)
  • Colonial Fox Theatre, Pittsburg, Kansas
  • Fox Theatre (Detroit, Michigan), Detroit, Michigan
  • Fox Theater (Joplin, Missouri)
  • Fox Theatre (St. Louis, Missouri)
  • Fox Theater at Foxwoods Resort Casino, Ledyard, Connecticut
  • Fox Theatre (North Platte, Nebraska)
  • Fox Theatre (Las Cruces, New Mexico)
  • Fox Theatre (Portland, Oregon)
  • Fox California Theatre (San Jose, California) Newly renovated and now called the California Theatre
  • Fox Theater (Spokane, Washington)
  • Fox Theatre (Green Bay, Wisconsin)
  • Fox Theater (Stevens Point, Wisconsin)

Famous quotes containing the words fox and/or theatre:

    We follow where the Swamp Fox guides,
    His friends and merry men are we;
    And when the troop of Tarleton rides,
    We burrow in the cypress tree.
    The turfy hammock is our bed,
    Our home is in the red deer’s den,
    Our roof, the tree-top overhead,
    For we are wild and hunted men.
    William Gilmore Simms (1806–1872)

    Compare ... the cinema with theatre. Both are dramatic arts. Theatre brings actors before a public and every night during the season they re-enact the same drama. Deep in the nature of theatre is a sense of ritual. The cinema, by contrast, transports its audience individually, singly, out of the theatre towards the unknown.
    John Berger (b. 1926)