Philadelphia Culture
Entertainment listings appear in newspapers such as the Philadelphia Inquirer, the Philadelphia Daily News and the monthly Philadelphia Magazine, as well as in free publications such as City Paper and Philadelphia Weekly. Tickets can be purchased directly from the venues or from TicketMaster (tel: (215) 336 2000; website: www.ticketmaster.com). For Kimmel Center events, contact Ticket Philadelphia (tel: (215) 893 1999; website: www.ticketphiladelphia.org).
Music: Opened in 1857, the Academy of Music, Broad Street and Locust Street (tel: (215) 893 1999; website: www.academyofmusic.org), is the country's oldest music hall and home to the Opera Company of Philadelphia (tel: (215) 893 3600; website: www.operaphilly.com).
Theatre: America's oldest theatre, Walnut Street Theatre, Ninth Street and Walnut Street (tel: (215) 574 3550; website: www.walnutstreettheatre.org), is in Philadelphia, along with the award-winning African- American Freedom Theatre, 1346 North Broad Street (tel: (215) 765 2793; website: www.freedomtheatre.org); the Forrest Theatre, 1114 Walnut Street (tel: (215) 923 1515; website: www.forrest-theatre.com), performs Broadway blockbusters, and the Prince Music Theater, 1412 Chestnut Street (tel: (215) 569 9700; website: www.princemusictheater.org), produces original musicals. The Arden Theatre Company, 40 North Second Street (tel: (215) 922 1122; website: www.ardentheatre.org), stages innovative productions. Productions at the Wilma Theater, 265 South Broad Street (tel: (215) 546 7824; website: www.wilmatheater.org), vary.
Dance: The Pennsylvania Ballet (tel: (215) 551 7000; website: www.paballet.org) dances classics and new works at the Academy of Music, Broad and Locust Streets, and Merriam Theater, 250 South Broad Street. A leading African-American dance company, Philadanco (tel: (215) 387 8200; website: www.philadanco.org), performs at the Kimmel Center, 260 South Broad Street.
Film: Philadelphia has been the setting for many films, including Rocky (1976), Trading Places (1983), The Sixth Sense (1999), Unbreakable (2000), portions of National Treasure (2004) with Nicholas Cage and, of course, Philadelphia (1993). The best art house cinemas in Philadelphia are the Ritz Cinemas (tel: 215 925 7900; website: www.landmarktheatres.com/Market/Philadelphia/Philadelphia_Frameset.htm) in Old City. More mainstream films are shown at Ritz Five, 214 Walnut Street; The Ritz at the Bourse, 400 Ranstead Street (tel: (215) 925 7900) and Ritz East (125 South Second Street) have comfortable reclining seats, and also show foreign and limited release films. See cutting-edge films at the Philadelphia Film Festival and the Philadelphia International Gay and Lesbian Film Festival (tel: (267) 765 9700; website: www.phillyfests.com).
Literary Notes: The city's most famous citizen, Benjamin Franklin, penned his timeless words of wisdom in his annual, Poor Richard's Almanack (1733-58), and Autobiography and Other Writings (1771-1788) here. For insight into one of the great America's great iconoclasts, read Walter Isaacson's immensely entertaining biography Benjamin Franklin: An American Life (2004).
From 1837 until 1847, Edgar Allan Poe resided in Philadelphia and wrote his famous The Fall of the House of Usher (1839), The Murders in the Rue Morgue (1841) and The Gold Bug (1843), as well as the poem Annabel Lee (1849), dedicated to his beloved wife. His house at North Seventh and Spring Garden streets is now the Edgar Allan Poe National Historic Site.
The great African-American writer and scholar W.E.B. Du Bois published some important works linked to the city, including The Philadelphia Negro (1899), a classic study of racism and its effects in the North after the Civil War. Other renowned literary Philadelphians include the poet Walt Whitman and author James A Michener, who hails from nearby Bucks County. Bucks County was also home to the Pulitzer- and Nobel-prize-winning author, Pearl S Buck, author of The Good Earth (1931). Her farmhouse at Perkasie is a tourist attraction. Upper-crust Philadelphia society was portrayed in Philip Barry's play, The Philadelphia Story (1939), which was made into a film starring Katharine Hepburn, Cary Grant and James Stewart. More recent works include Pete Dexter's God's Pocket (1995), which offers a gritty look at the big city by a former journalist.
Tours of Philadelphia
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Finland Activity & adventure holidays Finnish Lapland has enormous areas of untouched wilderness and mile upon mile of wild rolling fells. This vast open countryside, sparkling in the winter sunshine, just begs to be explored by
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Orlando Adrenaline Whether you’re enjoying the hair-raising delights of the world’s only flying rollercoaster called Manta at SeaWorld or racing through the Everglades on an airboat in search of alligators, one thing’s for
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Cambodia Luxury holidays Today Cambodia is symbolised by awesome Angkor Wat, the largest man-made religious structure in the world. However, Cambodia is also home to some of the finest boutique hotels in the world
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Laos Inspire Me When the French colonised Indochina they had a saying: "The Vietnamese grow the rice, the Cambodians watch the rice grow, and the Lao people listen to the rice grow." This is
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Vietnam Cultural breaks Vietnam is a country with a rich and varied history that is now firmly focused on her bright future. This is why it has become one of the hottest destinations for
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Dominican Republic Family holidays The Dominican Republic has soared in popularity as a tropical hotspot for families seeking sun, sand and an affordable holiday in the Caribbean. The island's main attraction is magnificent golden sand