The Grand Opera House (est.1888) of Boston , Massachusetts , was a theatre in the South End .[ 1] [ 2] Architect George Snell designed the 2,600-seat building on Washington Street .[ 3] [ 4] Managers and proprietors included Proctor & Mansfield,[ 5] A.H. Dexter,[ 6] George W. Magee,[ 7] and Stair & Wilbur.[ 8] Performances included Glyn 's Three Weeks .[ 9]
^ Grand Opera House, no.1176 Washington St. Boston Almanac, 1889, 1891, 1893-1894; Boston Register and Business Directory, 1921
^ Desirée J. Garcia (2007). "Subversive Sounds: Ethnic Spectatorship and Boston's Nickelodeon Theatres, 1907-1914". Film History . 19 .
^ The dramatic year, 1887-88 , Boston: Ticknor, 1889, OL 7204331M
^ Julius Cahn's official theatrical guide. NY: 1906
^ King's Handbook of Boston, 9th ed. Boston: Moses King, 1889
^ Boston Daily Globe, Dec. 29, 1893
^ Boston Daily Globe, May 8, 1899; Feb. 5, 1902
^ Julius Cahn's official theatrical guide. NY: 1906, 1910
^ Neil Miller (2010), Banned in Boston: the Watch and Ward Society's Crusade Against Books, Burlesque, and the Social Evil , Boston: Beacon Press, ISBN 9780807051122 – via Overdrive (subscription required)