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The Avenida Theatre The Avenida Theatre (Teatro Avenida) is a stage theatre in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Overview The Avenida Theatre was inaugurated on Buenos Aires' central Avenida de Mayo in 1908 with a production of Spanish dramatist Lope de Vega's Justice Without Revenge. The production was directed by María Guerrero, a Spanish Argentine theatre director who popularized classical drama in Argentina during the late 19th century and would establish the important Cervantes Theatre in 1921. The theatre became the chief venue for Spanish theatre in Buenos Aires after the conversion of the Cervantes into the National Comedy Theatre in 1933 and Federico García Lorca's play Bodas de Sangre was staged there that year. It soon earned renown for its varied operettas and zarzuelas (many led by renowned Spanish theatre director Federico Moreno Torroba), as well as for special events, such as a 1939 production of Aida for the benefit of Spanish charities dealing with the aftermath of that country's Civil War. Main hall The production of Spanish theatre at the Avenida declined after 1960, and the Avenida turned to Broadway theatre productions instead. One early success was the local 1963 production of Cole Porter's Kiss Me, Kate. Varying its repertoire, the Avenida featured a production of Giuseppe Verdi's La Traviata in 1967 and the theatre's purchase by local impresario Faustino García helped lead to Moreno Torroba's return in 1970 and a revival of the Avenida's erstwhile standby, the zarzuela, during that decade. The advent of Argentina's last military dictatorship in 1976 led to an abrupt decline in local theatre activity, leading to the Avenida's closure in 1977. A 1979 fire nearly destroyed the Avenida, and the theatre remained shuttered until its reopening on June 19, 1994; the original building's top section, which included the former Hotel Castilla, were not restored however. The theatre is operated by Buenos Aires Lírica, an NGO devoted to the advancement of classical opera in Buenos Aires. With the closure of the city's Teatro Colón, which started ongoing refurbishment in October 2006, the Avenida picked up its classical opera programming, and in the past few years both Buenos Aires Lírica alongside with Juventus Lírica, consisting mostly of promising young voices, staged humble productions of major titles such as Puccini's Madama Butterfly, Bizet's Carmen, Verdi's Aida and La Traviata, Mozart's The Magic Flute and The Marriage of Figaro, Rossini's The Barber of Seville, amongst others. References and external links The theatre and the former Hotel Castilla as they appeared around 1910 Teatro Avenida (Spanish) Buenos Aires Lírica (Spanish) v • d • e Landmarks of Buenos Aires Note: "Buenos Aires" denotes the city of Buenos Aires proper, not the entire Greater Buenos Aires metropolitan area. Public & historic buildings and structures Argentine Congress · English Clock Tower · Cabildo · Café Tortoni · Casa Rosada · Central Post Office · City Hall · City Legislature · Customs House · Duhau Palace · Estrugamou Building · Floralis Generica · Galerías Pacífico · Hotel de Inmigrantes · Kavanagh building · Libertador Building · Metropolitan Cathedral · Monument to Giuseppe Garibaldi · Obelisk of Buenos Aires · Palacio Barolo · May Pyramid · Pizzurno Palace · Plaza Hotel · Recoleta Cemetery · San Martín Palace · Sarmiento Frigate · Uruguay Corvette · The Water Company Palace · Women's Bridge Precincts and neighbourhoods Almagro · Belgrano · Buenos Aires CBD · Caballito · City Centre · Colegiales · Montserrat · Núñez · Palermo · Puerto Madero · Recoleta · Retiro · San Telmo Nature and parks Avellaneda Park · Botanical gardens · Buenos Aires Ecological Reserve · Chacabuco Park · Congressional Plaza · Japanese Gardens · Lezama Park · Palermo gardens · Plaza de la República · Plaza de Mayo · Plaza San Martín · Parque Centenario · Buenos Aires Zoo Cultural Institutions El Ateneo Bookstore · Argentine Automobile Club · Bernardino Rivadavia Natural Sciences Museum · Buenos Aires Museum of Modern Art · Café Tortoni · Fortabat Art Collection · House of Culture · Illuminated Block · King Fahd Cultural Center · Latin American Art Museum · Museum of Foreign Debt · National Library · National Museum of Decorative Arts · National Museum of Fine Arts · National Museum of History · Opera House · Paz Palace · Planetarium · Recoleta Cultural Center · San Martín Cultural Center · San Martín National Institute · Sarmiento Museum  · Eduardo Sívori Museum Sport Bombonera Stadium · River Plate Stadium · Ducó Stadium · Maradona Stadium · Vélez Sársfield Stadium · Argentine Hippodrome of Palermo · Lawn Tennis Club · Polo Stadium · Race Circuit  · Arena Obras Sanitarias · CeNARD · Estadio Ricardo Etcheverry Transportation Buenos Aires Belgrano Sur · Buenos Aires Metro · Constitution station · Federico Lacroze station · Jorge Newbery Airport · Ministro Pistarini International Airport · Once station · Retiro station · Tranvía del Este · Tren de la Costa Shopping and entertainment Abasto Mall · Avenida Theatre · Cervantes Theatre · Fishermen's Pier · Galerías Pacífico · Gran Rex Theatre · Luna Park Arena · Paseo La Plaza · Patio Bullrich · Opera Theatre · Parque de la Ciudad · La Trastienda Club Streets & avenues 9 de Julio Avenue · Avenida Alvear · Avenida de Mayo · Avenida del Libertador · Callao Avenue · Caminito · Córdoba Avenue · Coronel Díaz Street · Corrientes Avenue · Figueroa Alcorta Avenue · Florida Street · General Paz Avenue · Leandro Alem Avenue · President Roque Sáenz Peña Avenue · Rivadavia Avenue · Santa Fe Avenue · Scalabrini Ortiz Avenue Coordinates: 34°36′34″S 58°23′02″W / 34.60944°S 58.38389°W / -34.60944; -58.38389