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Manhattan s Village East Cinema and Cinemas 123 join the Angelika family NEW YORK (March 3, 2021) - New York City s iconic arthouse cinema, Angelika Film Center & Cafe (the Angelika ), owned and operated by Reading International, Inc. (NASDAQ:RDI), will welcome back film lovers on Friday, March 5 at its flagship location in Soho. The Angelika will open with extensive sanitization and safety measures creating an environment carefully designed to address COVID-19 concerns. In alignment with the reopening, two Manhattan theaters - Village East Cinema at 189 2nd Avenue and Cinema 123 at 1001 Third Avenue in Manhattan - have joined the Angelika Film Center circuit and will now be known as Village East by Angelika ( Village East ) and Cinema 123 by Angelika ( Cinema 123 ), respectively.
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By Natalie Sherman
image captionAs cinemas reopen, will audiences return?
As soon as authorities announced that New York City cinemas could reopen on 5 March, Eric Thirteen was at his computer, ready to book tickets for the first film he could find.
Before the pandemic, the 34-year-old, an independent film director and producer, went to screenings three or four times a week. But he s been largely homebound for nearly a year. It s a huge vacuum, he says. I could see almost anything right now and I d probably be thrilled.
As cinemas reopen in New York - a key cultural capital in the US and one of its biggest movie markets - the film world is watching to see just how widely shared Eric s enthusiasm is.
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Owner Valerie Gurdal discusses the cherished landmark, which is expanding to roomier digs this month
By Kara Baskin Globe Correspondent,Updated February 16, 2021, 11:00 a.m.
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Formaggio Kitchen owner Valerie Gurdal.Courtesy photo
Cambridge has lost some of its most beloved cultural touchstones recently, from The Peopleâs Republik to the Cantab Lounge to the Border Café, and on and on. Amid this avalanche of goodbyes, a bright spot: Formaggio Kitchen in Huron Village.
Valerie Gurdal, 62, has worked at the cheese shop since 1984 and owned it outright with her husband, Ihsan, since the 1990s. Sheâs watched the city shed its bohemian layers, and yet she still remains, providing groceries to everyone from Yo-Yo Ma to Peter Wolf to eager novices looking to impress a date or attempt a gourmet meal.
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An aerial view of the derelict Spring Garden Station that was once part of the Reading Railroad. (Courtesy of Arts & Crafts Holdings)
Two private groups have filed a petition seeking to take legal stewardship over an abandoned train station along the Reading Viaduct, a decrepit former rail line that cuts through the heart of gentrifying neighborhoods north of Center City and has long been eyed for an elevated park.
Arts & Crafts Holdings, a real estate development company, and nonprofit Scioli Turco filed a petition last week in Philadelphia’s Court of Common Pleas seeking conservatorship for 901 Spring Garden St. That is the legal address of the former Spring Garden Station, which adjoins the elevated rail line and has sat abandoned for decades.
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