Puneet Varma (Editor)

Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium

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Province
  
Alberta

Phone
  
+1 780-427-2760

Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium

Address
  
11455 87 Ave NW, Edmonton, AB T6G 2T2, Canada

Similar
  
Southern Alberta Jubilee A, Francis Winspear Centre for, Citadel Theatre, Northlands Coliseum, Rogers Place

Brit floyd comfortably numb northern alberta jubilee auditorium edmonton ab august 15 2015


The Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium is a 4-million-cubic-foot (110,000 m3) performing arts, culture and community facility, located in Edmonton, Alberta.

Contents

General information and history

The auditorium was built in 1955, on a 13-acre (53,000 m2) site adjacent to the University of Alberta to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Alberta. It is owned and operated by the Government of Alberta. The Jubilee is home to the Edmonton Opera and the Alberta Ballet. For many years it has hosted Broadway shows, stand-up comedians, theatre productions, bands, orchestras, dance festivals and awards ceremonies.

The main theatre hosts 2,538 people on three levels, or 2,416 if the Orchestra pit is in use. There is also a banquet room, meeting room, rehearsal hall and luxury suite available to rent, along with being able to hold trade shows and meetings in the theatre proper and its lobbies. In 2005 as part of the celebrations for the Alberta Centennial, the auditorium underwent extensive renovations totalling a cost of $91 million.

British rock band Procol Harum performed on November 18, 1971, along with The Edmonton Symphony Orchestra, the show was recorded and later released as a live album, entitled Procol Harum Live In Concert with the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra.

In January 2010, theatre reviewer Pollstar revealed that the Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium was the busiest theatre in Canada, selling 146,555 tickets in 2009, beating its twin, the Southern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium in Calgary (138,515 tickets) and Toronto’s Massey Hall (93,742 tickets).

References

Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium Wikipedia