Theater in Detroit

4 results

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  • Baker's of Milford

    2025 S. Milford Rd., Milford Detroit

    (248) 685-3300; (248) 684-9302 (FAX)

    There's always something happening at Baker's. See live bands play every night, Monday through Saturday. Monday is family night, and Tuesday is the largest cruise night in the Midwest, with over 1,000 classic cars participating each week. Come back on Wednesday for Baker's famous all-you-can-eat crab legs. Thursday is ladies' night, and on Sunday, check out the delicious brunch buffet. Come as you are and enjoy great music while you eat, or have a quiet night out and enjoy dinner in the separate dining room. Planning an event? Call 248-685-3300 for information about one of our banquet rooms, for groups of 50 to 500. Get out of the house and check out what's happening at Baker's tonight!
  • Fox Theatre

    2211 Woodward Ave. Detroit

    "Tickets for Fox Theatre events may be purchased at the Fox Theatre and Joe Louis Arena box offices and Hockeytown Authentics in Troy (without service charges) and all Ticketmaster locations, including Marshall Field's. The Fox has the entire live entertainment industry and ticket buyers talking about their old memories, as well as making new ones .... Reveling in the marvel of finding again a treasure once lost, audiences of all ages flock to The Fox in record numbers to be part of the Fox Phenomenon!" — From Olympia Entertainment's Web site.

    14 events 70 articles
  • Gem Theatre

    333 Madison Ave. Detroit

    (313) 963-9800; (313) 963-0873 (FAX)

    Designed by leading Detroit architect George D. Mason in 1927, the 450-seat Gem Theatre boasts a lavish, intricately painted ceiling, ornate proscenium panels, rich carpet, and 1920s lighting. The theatre was built by the Twentieth Century Club, a group of cultural and civic-minded women of social prominence, to adjoin the Century Club building, a Mission-style meeting facility constructed in 1903. Prior to the Depression, the “Little Theatre” served as Detroit’s first foreign film house, and survived several name changes before closing as an adult movie house, the “Gem,” in 1978. Detroit developer Charles Forbes purchased the building in the 1980s, and by 1991, had returned the Gem Theatre to its Spanish Revival-style brilliance. In 1997, the Gem Theatre was faced with extinction in view of the City of Detroit’s plan to construct new stadiums for the Detroit Tigers and Detroit Lions. Upon reaching an agreement with the city, the Forbes family began preparations to relocate the Gem/Century building and preserve this historic structure for a second time. On November 10, 1997, the Gem Theatre and Century Club facility finished its five-block journey, breaking the Guinness Book world record as the heaviest building ever moved on wheels. The Century Club, restored in 1999, now houses a 200-seat cabaret-style theatre, as well as a fine-dining restaurant and banquet facility. Don’t miss the world-class musical and comedic productions in this intimate, elegant venue.
  • Genitti's Hole in the Wall

    108 E. Main St., Northville Detroit

    (248) 349-0522; (248) 349-4641 (FAX)

    Lunch is deli-style with homemade soups and sandwiches. Dinner is seven courses, family style, by reservation only. Complete with interactive dinner theater.