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“The two bags in question weren’t even Coles bags, they were Best & Less, why does it matter what bags we use as long as they are clean [M](these two were brand new as[/M] only had got them yesterday),” [M]she wrote.[/M]
|
SUPERMARKET staff in Australia have faced attacks and abuse from angry shoppers over a plastic bag ban - with one man even grabbing a female staff member by the throat.
The shock incident last Saturday at Woolworths in Mandurah, Western Australia, came as the retail giant brought in the ban a week before the nationwide ban on single-use plastics came into force in Australia today.
2 Tempers flared in an Australian Woolworths as the supermarket giant introduced a ban on plastic bags Credit: Reuters
Woolworths scrapped plastic bags on June 20 and instead introduced a 15 cent (8p) resusable bag or a "Bag for Good" for 99 cent (55p).
But according to The West Australian, a worker was assaulted by an irate customer on June 23 after being told there were no single-use plastic bags.
The Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees’ Association assistant secretary Ben Harris said: "A male customer in the self-serve area swore loudly at a female worker. She provided him with some complimentary bags and apologised.
"He made a mistake by scanning an item twice, the worker came to help him remove it and he walked up behind her and put his hands around her throat."
2 Stock image. Another staff member was reportedly called 'money-grabbing scum' Credit: Reuters
The Woolworths general manager for Western Australia told the paper that police were called to the incident, and the worker is being supported.
A survey conducted with over 100 Woolworths staff by the union revealed nearly half had faced abuse from customers, the paper reported.
Staff member Lauren McGowan told News.com.au: "I work at Woolies and have already been abused countless times.
|
n
|
“The two bags in question weren’t even Coles bags, they were Best & Less, why [M]does it matter what bags we use as long as they are clean[/M] (these two were brand new as only had got them yesterday),” [M]she wrote.[/M]
|
SUPERMARKET staff in Australia have faced attacks and abuse from angry shoppers over a plastic bag ban - with one man even grabbing a female staff member by the throat.
The shock incident last Saturday at Woolworths in Mandurah, Western Australia, came as the retail giant brought in the ban a week before the nationwide ban on single-use plastics came into force in Australia today.
2 Tempers flared in an Australian Woolworths as the supermarket giant introduced a ban on plastic bags Credit: Reuters
Woolworths scrapped plastic bags on June 20 and instead introduced a 15 cent (8p) resusable bag or a "Bag for Good" for 99 cent (55p).
But according to The West Australian, a worker was assaulted by an irate customer on June 23 after being told there were no single-use plastic bags.
The Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees’ Association assistant secretary Ben Harris said: "A male customer in the self-serve area swore loudly at a female worker. She provided him with some complimentary bags and apologised.
"He made a mistake by scanning an item twice, the worker came to help him remove it and he walked up behind her and put his hands around her throat."
2 Stock image. Another staff member was reportedly called 'money-grabbing scum' Credit: Reuters
The Woolworths general manager for Western Australia told the paper that police were called to the incident, and the worker is being supported.
A survey conducted with over 100 Woolworths staff by the union revealed nearly half had faced abuse from customers, the paper reported.
Staff member Lauren McGowan told News.com.au: "I work at Woolies and have already been abused countless times.
|
n
|
“The [M]two bags[/M] in question weren’t even Coles bags, they [M]were Best & Less[/M], why does it matter what bags we use as long as they are clean (these two were brand new as only had got them yesterday),” [M]she wrote.[/M]
|
SUPERMARKET staff in Australia have faced attacks and abuse from angry shoppers over a plastic bag ban - with one man even grabbing a female staff member by the throat.
The shock incident last Saturday at Woolworths in Mandurah, Western Australia, came as the retail giant brought in the ban a week before the nationwide ban on single-use plastics came into force in Australia today.
2 Tempers flared in an Australian Woolworths as the supermarket giant introduced a ban on plastic bags Credit: Reuters
Woolworths scrapped plastic bags on June 20 and instead introduced a 15 cent (8p) resusable bag or a "Bag for Good" for 99 cent (55p).
But according to The West Australian, a worker was assaulted by an irate customer on June 23 after being told there were no single-use plastic bags.
The Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees’ Association assistant secretary Ben Harris said: "A male customer in the self-serve area swore loudly at a female worker. She provided him with some complimentary bags and apologised.
"He made a mistake by scanning an item twice, the worker came to help him remove it and he walked up behind her and put his hands around her throat."
2 Stock image. Another staff member was reportedly called 'money-grabbing scum' Credit: Reuters
The Woolworths general manager for Western Australia told the paper that police were called to the incident, and the worker is being supported.
A survey conducted with over 100 Woolworths staff by the union revealed nearly half had faced abuse from customers, the paper reported.
Staff member Lauren McGowan told News.com.au: "I work at Woolies and have already been abused countless times.
|
n
|
“The [M]two bags in question weren’t even Coles bags[/M], they were Best & Less, why does it matter what bags we use as long as they are clean (these two were brand new as only had got them yesterday),” [M]she wrote.[/M]
|
SUPERMARKET staff in Australia have faced attacks and abuse from angry shoppers over a plastic bag ban - with one man even grabbing a female staff member by the throat.
The shock incident last Saturday at Woolworths in Mandurah, Western Australia, came as the retail giant brought in the ban a week before the nationwide ban on single-use plastics came into force in Australia today.
2 Tempers flared in an Australian Woolworths as the supermarket giant introduced a ban on plastic bags Credit: Reuters
Woolworths scrapped plastic bags on June 20 and instead introduced a 15 cent (8p) resusable bag or a "Bag for Good" for 99 cent (55p).
But according to The West Australian, a worker was assaulted by an irate customer on June 23 after being told there were no single-use plastic bags.
The Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees’ Association assistant secretary Ben Harris said: "A male customer in the self-serve area swore loudly at a female worker. She provided him with some complimentary bags and apologised.
"He made a mistake by scanning an item twice, the worker came to help him remove it and he walked up behind her and put his hands around her throat."
2 Stock image. Another staff member was reportedly called 'money-grabbing scum' Credit: Reuters
The Woolworths general manager for Western Australia told the paper that police were called to the incident, and the worker is being supported.
A survey conducted with over 100 Woolworths staff by the union revealed nearly half had faced abuse from customers, the paper reported.
Staff member Lauren McGowan told News.com.au: "I work at Woolies and have already been abused countless times.
|
n
|
READ: Items you may soon be banned from using
[M]She claims[/M] her father then paid for five Woolworths bags, adding that the [M]staff[/M] didn’t mention the free bags that are currently available, and [M]told him he needed multiple bags to pack items separately[/M].
|
SUPERMARKET staff in Australia have faced attacks and abuse from angry shoppers over a plastic bag ban - with one man even grabbing a female staff member by the throat.
The shock incident last Saturday at Woolworths in Mandurah, Western Australia, came as the retail giant brought in the ban a week before the nationwide ban on single-use plastics came into force in Australia today.
2 Tempers flared in an Australian Woolworths as the supermarket giant introduced a ban on plastic bags Credit: Reuters
Woolworths scrapped plastic bags on June 20 and instead introduced a 15 cent (8p) resusable bag or a "Bag for Good" for 99 cent (55p).
But according to The West Australian, a worker was assaulted by an irate customer on June 23 after being told there were no single-use plastic bags.
The Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees’ Association assistant secretary Ben Harris said: "A male customer in the self-serve area swore loudly at a female worker. She provided him with some complimentary bags and apologised.
"He made a mistake by scanning an item twice, the worker came to help him remove it and he walked up behind her and put his hands around her throat."
2 Stock image. Another staff member was reportedly called 'money-grabbing scum' Credit: Reuters
The Woolworths general manager for Western Australia told the paper that police were called to the incident, and the worker is being supported.
A survey conducted with over 100 Woolworths staff by the union revealed nearly half had faced abuse from customers, the paper reported.
Staff member Lauren McGowan told News.com.au: "I work at Woolies and have already been abused countless times.
|
n
|
READ: Items you may soon be banned from using
[M]She claims[/M] her father then paid for five Woolworths bags, adding that the [M]staff didn’t mention the free bags that are currently available[/M], and told him he needed multiple bags to pack items separately.
|
SUPERMARKET staff in Australia have faced attacks and abuse from angry shoppers over a plastic bag ban - with one man even grabbing a female staff member by the throat.
The shock incident last Saturday at Woolworths in Mandurah, Western Australia, came as the retail giant brought in the ban a week before the nationwide ban on single-use plastics came into force in Australia today.
2 Tempers flared in an Australian Woolworths as the supermarket giant introduced a ban on plastic bags Credit: Reuters
Woolworths scrapped plastic bags on June 20 and instead introduced a 15 cent (8p) resusable bag or a "Bag for Good" for 99 cent (55p).
But according to The West Australian, a worker was assaulted by an irate customer on June 23 after being told there were no single-use plastic bags.
The Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees’ Association assistant secretary Ben Harris said: "A male customer in the self-serve area swore loudly at a female worker. She provided him with some complimentary bags and apologised.
"He made a mistake by scanning an item twice, the worker came to help him remove it and he walked up behind her and put his hands around her throat."
2 Stock image. Another staff member was reportedly called 'money-grabbing scum' Credit: Reuters
The Woolworths general manager for Western Australia told the paper that police were called to the incident, and the worker is being supported.
A survey conducted with over 100 Woolworths staff by the union revealed nearly half had faced abuse from customers, the paper reported.
Staff member Lauren McGowan told News.com.au: "I work at Woolies and have already been abused countless times.
|
n
|
READ: Items you may soon be banned from using
[M]She claims her father then paid for five Woolworths bags[/M], adding that the staff didn’t mention the free bags that are currently available, and told him he needed multiple bags to pack items separately.
|
SUPERMARKET staff in Australia have faced attacks and abuse from angry shoppers over a plastic bag ban - with one man even grabbing a female staff member by the throat.
The shock incident last Saturday at Woolworths in Mandurah, Western Australia, came as the retail giant brought in the ban a week before the nationwide ban on single-use plastics came into force in Australia today.
2 Tempers flared in an Australian Woolworths as the supermarket giant introduced a ban on plastic bags Credit: Reuters
Woolworths scrapped plastic bags on June 20 and instead introduced a 15 cent (8p) resusable bag or a "Bag for Good" for 99 cent (55p).
But according to The West Australian, a worker was assaulted by an irate customer on June 23 after being told there were no single-use plastic bags.
The Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees’ Association assistant secretary Ben Harris said: "A male customer in the self-serve area swore loudly at a female worker. She provided him with some complimentary bags and apologised.
"He made a mistake by scanning an item twice, the worker came to help him remove it and he walked up behind her and put his hands around her throat."
2 Stock image. Another staff member was reportedly called 'money-grabbing scum' Credit: Reuters
The Woolworths general manager for Western Australia told the paper that police were called to the incident, and the worker is being supported.
A survey conducted with over 100 Woolworths staff by the union revealed nearly half had faced abuse from customers, the paper reported.
Staff member Lauren McGowan told News.com.au: "I work at Woolies and have already been abused countless times.
|
n
|
GROCERY stores across the country at still copping major backlash from [M]customers[/M] over [M]the plastic bag ban[/M] which [M]sees them having to[/M] bring their own [M]bags[/M] or [M]pay 15 cents extra for a reusable one[/M].
|
SUPERMARKET staff in Australia have faced attacks and abuse from angry shoppers over a plastic bag ban - with one man even grabbing a female staff member by the throat.
The shock incident last Saturday at Woolworths in Mandurah, Western Australia, came as the retail giant brought in the ban a week before the nationwide ban on single-use plastics came into force in Australia today.
2 Tempers flared in an Australian Woolworths as the supermarket giant introduced a ban on plastic bags Credit: Reuters
Woolworths scrapped plastic bags on June 20 and instead introduced a 15 cent (8p) resusable bag or a "Bag for Good" for 99 cent (55p).
But according to The West Australian, a worker was assaulted by an irate customer on June 23 after being told there were no single-use plastic bags.
The Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees’ Association assistant secretary Ben Harris said: "A male customer in the self-serve area swore loudly at a female worker. She provided him with some complimentary bags and apologised.
"He made a mistake by scanning an item twice, the worker came to help him remove it and he walked up behind her and put his hands around her throat."
2 Stock image. Another staff member was reportedly called 'money-grabbing scum' Credit: Reuters
The Woolworths general manager for Western Australia told the paper that police were called to the incident, and the worker is being supported.
A survey conducted with over 100 Woolworths staff by the union revealed nearly half had faced abuse from customers, the paper reported.
Staff member Lauren McGowan told News.com.au: "I work at Woolies and have already been abused countless times.
|
e
|
GROCERY stores across the country at still copping major backlash from [M]customers[/M] over [M]the plastic bag ban[/M] which [M]sees them having to bring their own bags[/M] or pay 15 cents extra for a reusable one.
|
SUPERMARKET staff in Australia have faced attacks and abuse from angry shoppers over a plastic bag ban - with one man even grabbing a female staff member by the throat.
The shock incident last Saturday at Woolworths in Mandurah, Western Australia, came as the retail giant brought in the ban a week before the nationwide ban on single-use plastics came into force in Australia today.
2 Tempers flared in an Australian Woolworths as the supermarket giant introduced a ban on plastic bags Credit: Reuters
Woolworths scrapped plastic bags on June 20 and instead introduced a 15 cent (8p) resusable bag or a "Bag for Good" for 99 cent (55p).
But according to The West Australian, a worker was assaulted by an irate customer on June 23 after being told there were no single-use plastic bags.
The Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees’ Association assistant secretary Ben Harris said: "A male customer in the self-serve area swore loudly at a female worker. She provided him with some complimentary bags and apologised.
"He made a mistake by scanning an item twice, the worker came to help him remove it and he walked up behind her and put his hands around her throat."
2 Stock image. Another staff member was reportedly called 'money-grabbing scum' Credit: Reuters
The Woolworths general manager for Western Australia told the paper that police were called to the incident, and the worker is being supported.
A survey conducted with over 100 Woolworths staff by the union revealed nearly half had faced abuse from customers, the paper reported.
Staff member Lauren McGowan told News.com.au: "I work at Woolies and have already been abused countless times.
|
n
|
[M]GROCERY stores[/M] across the country at [M]still copping major backlash[/M] from customers [M]over the plastic bag ban[/M] which sees them having to bring their own bags or pay 15 cents extra for a reusable one.
|
SUPERMARKET staff in Australia have faced attacks and abuse from angry shoppers over a plastic bag ban - with one man even grabbing a female staff member by the throat.
The shock incident last Saturday at Woolworths in Mandurah, Western Australia, came as the retail giant brought in the ban a week before the nationwide ban on single-use plastics came into force in Australia today.
2 Tempers flared in an Australian Woolworths as the supermarket giant introduced a ban on plastic bags Credit: Reuters
Woolworths scrapped plastic bags on June 20 and instead introduced a 15 cent (8p) resusable bag or a "Bag for Good" for 99 cent (55p).
But according to The West Australian, a worker was assaulted by an irate customer on June 23 after being told there were no single-use plastic bags.
The Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees’ Association assistant secretary Ben Harris said: "A male customer in the self-serve area swore loudly at a female worker. She provided him with some complimentary bags and apologised.
"He made a mistake by scanning an item twice, the worker came to help him remove it and he walked up behind her and put his hands around her throat."
2 Stock image. Another staff member was reportedly called 'money-grabbing scum' Credit: Reuters
The Woolworths general manager for Western Australia told the paper that police were called to the incident, and the worker is being supported.
A survey conducted with over 100 Woolworths staff by the union revealed nearly half had faced abuse from customers, the paper reported.
Staff member Lauren McGowan told News.com.au: "I work at Woolies and have already been abused countless times.
|
e
|
[M]GROCERY stores[/M] across the country at [M]still copping major backlash from customers[/M] over the plastic bag ban which sees them having to bring their own bags or pay 15 cents extra for a reusable one.
|
SUPERMARKET staff in Australia have faced attacks and abuse from angry shoppers over a plastic bag ban - with one man even grabbing a female staff member by the throat.
The shock incident last Saturday at Woolworths in Mandurah, Western Australia, came as the retail giant brought in the ban a week before the nationwide ban on single-use plastics came into force in Australia today.
2 Tempers flared in an Australian Woolworths as the supermarket giant introduced a ban on plastic bags Credit: Reuters
Woolworths scrapped plastic bags on June 20 and instead introduced a 15 cent (8p) resusable bag or a "Bag for Good" for 99 cent (55p).
But according to The West Australian, a worker was assaulted by an irate customer on June 23 after being told there were no single-use plastic bags.
The Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees’ Association assistant secretary Ben Harris said: "A male customer in the self-serve area swore loudly at a female worker. She provided him with some complimentary bags and apologised.
"He made a mistake by scanning an item twice, the worker came to help him remove it and he walked up behind her and put his hands around her throat."
2 Stock image. Another staff member was reportedly called 'money-grabbing scum' Credit: Reuters
The Woolworths general manager for Western Australia told the paper that police were called to the incident, and the worker is being supported.
A survey conducted with over 100 Woolworths staff by the union revealed nearly half had faced abuse from customers, the paper reported.
Staff member Lauren McGowan told News.com.au: "I work at Woolies and have already been abused countless times.
|
e
|
[M]GROCERY stores across the country[/M] at [M]still copping major backlash[/M] from customers over the plastic bag ban which sees them having to bring their own bags or pay 15 cents extra for a reusable one.
|
SUPERMARKET staff in Australia have faced attacks and abuse from angry shoppers over a plastic bag ban - with one man even grabbing a female staff member by the throat.
The shock incident last Saturday at Woolworths in Mandurah, Western Australia, came as the retail giant brought in the ban a week before the nationwide ban on single-use plastics came into force in Australia today.
2 Tempers flared in an Australian Woolworths as the supermarket giant introduced a ban on plastic bags Credit: Reuters
Woolworths scrapped plastic bags on June 20 and instead introduced a 15 cent (8p) resusable bag or a "Bag for Good" for 99 cent (55p).
But according to The West Australian, a worker was assaulted by an irate customer on June 23 after being told there were no single-use plastic bags.
The Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees’ Association assistant secretary Ben Harris said: "A male customer in the self-serve area swore loudly at a female worker. She provided him with some complimentary bags and apologised.
"He made a mistake by scanning an item twice, the worker came to help him remove it and he walked up behind her and put his hands around her throat."
2 Stock image. Another staff member was reportedly called 'money-grabbing scum' Credit: Reuters
The Woolworths general manager for Western Australia told the paper that police were called to the incident, and the worker is being supported.
A survey conducted with over 100 Woolworths staff by the union revealed nearly half had faced abuse from customers, the paper reported.
Staff member Lauren McGowan told News.com.au: "I work at Woolies and have already been abused countless times.
|
e
|
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the [M]Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926[/M].
|
Türkiye Radyo Televizyon Kurumu, abbreviated as TRT - Turkish public broadcaster. Radio was founded on May 1, 1964, and television on January 31, 1968. About 70% of TRT funding comes from a tax on electricity bills and a license tax on TV and radio sets. The rest of TRT funding comes from government subsidies (around 20%) and the remaining 10% comes from advertising.
TRT was for many years the only provider of television and radio in Turkey. Before the introduction of commercial radio in 1990, and then commercial television in 1992, it had a broadcasting monopoly. The recent deregulation of the Turkish TV broadcasting market has led to the creation of analogue cable TV.
TRT's predecessor, Türkiye Radyoları, was one of the 23 founding organizations of the European Broadcasting Union in 1950; returned to the EBU as TRT in 1972. The original company began test radio broadcasts in 1926, with a studio built in Istanbul in 1927 and a studio in Ankara in 1928.
|
e
|
[M]The corporation was founded by the Turkish government[/M] in 1964 [M]on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company[/M], created in 1926.
|
Türkiye Radyo Televizyon Kurumu, abbreviated as TRT - Turkish public broadcaster. Radio was founded on May 1, 1964, and television on January 31, 1968. About 70% of TRT funding comes from a tax on electricity bills and a license tax on TV and radio sets. The rest of TRT funding comes from government subsidies (around 20%) and the remaining 10% comes from advertising.
TRT was for many years the only provider of television and radio in Turkey. Before the introduction of commercial radio in 1990, and then commercial television in 1992, it had a broadcasting monopoly. The recent deregulation of the Turkish TV broadcasting market has led to the creation of analogue cable TV.
TRT's predecessor, Türkiye Radyoları, was one of the 23 founding organizations of the European Broadcasting Union in 1950; returned to the EBU as TRT in 1972. The original company began test radio broadcasts in 1926, with a studio built in Istanbul in 1927 and a studio in Ankara in 1928.
|
n
|
[M]The corporation was founded by the Turkish government[/M] in [M]1964[/M] on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926.
|
Türkiye Radyo Televizyon Kurumu, abbreviated as TRT - Turkish public broadcaster. Radio was founded on May 1, 1964, and television on January 31, 1968. About 70% of TRT funding comes from a tax on electricity bills and a license tax on TV and radio sets. The rest of TRT funding comes from government subsidies (around 20%) and the remaining 10% comes from advertising.
TRT was for many years the only provider of television and radio in Turkey. Before the introduction of commercial radio in 1990, and then commercial television in 1992, it had a broadcasting monopoly. The recent deregulation of the Turkish TV broadcasting market has led to the creation of analogue cable TV.
TRT's predecessor, Türkiye Radyoları, was one of the 23 founding organizations of the European Broadcasting Union in 1950; returned to the EBU as TRT in 1972. The original company began test radio broadcasts in 1926, with a studio built in Istanbul in 1927 and a studio in Ankara in 1928.
|
e
|
[M]The corporation was founded by the Turkish government[/M] in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926.
|
Türkiye Radyo Televizyon Kurumu, abbreviated as TRT - Turkish public broadcaster. Radio was founded on May 1, 1964, and television on January 31, 1968. About 70% of TRT funding comes from a tax on electricity bills and a license tax on TV and radio sets. The rest of TRT funding comes from government subsidies (around 20%) and the remaining 10% comes from advertising.
TRT was for many years the only provider of television and radio in Turkey. Before the introduction of commercial radio in 1990, and then commercial television in 1992, it had a broadcasting monopoly. The recent deregulation of the Turkish TV broadcasting market has led to the creation of analogue cable TV.
TRT's predecessor, Türkiye Radyoları, was one of the 23 founding organizations of the European Broadcasting Union in 1950; returned to the EBU as TRT in 1972. The original company began test radio broadcasts in 1926, with a studio built in Istanbul in 1927 and a studio in Ankara in 1928.
|
n
|
[M]It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union[/M].
|
Türkiye Radyo Televizyon Kurumu, abbreviated as TRT - Turkish public broadcaster. Radio was founded on May 1, 1964, and television on January 31, 1968. About 70% of TRT funding comes from a tax on electricity bills and a license tax on TV and radio sets. The rest of TRT funding comes from government subsidies (around 20%) and the remaining 10% comes from advertising.
TRT was for many years the only provider of television and radio in Turkey. Before the introduction of commercial radio in 1990, and then commercial television in 1992, it had a broadcasting monopoly. The recent deregulation of the Turkish TV broadcasting market has led to the creation of analogue cable TV.
TRT's predecessor, Türkiye Radyoları, was one of the 23 founding organizations of the European Broadcasting Union in 1950; returned to the EBU as TRT in 1972. The original company began test radio broadcasts in 1926, with a studio built in Istanbul in 1927 and a studio in Ankara in 1928.
|
n
|
Turkey is one of the founders of the [M]European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950[/M].
|
Türkiye Radyo Televizyon Kurumu, abbreviated as TRT - Turkish public broadcaster. Radio was founded on May 1, 1964, and television on January 31, 1968. About 70% of TRT funding comes from a tax on electricity bills and a license tax on TV and radio sets. The rest of TRT funding comes from government subsidies (around 20%) and the remaining 10% comes from advertising.
TRT was for many years the only provider of television and radio in Turkey. Before the introduction of commercial radio in 1990, and then commercial television in 1992, it had a broadcasting monopoly. The recent deregulation of the Turkish TV broadcasting market has led to the creation of analogue cable TV.
TRT's predecessor, Türkiye Radyoları, was one of the 23 founding organizations of the European Broadcasting Union in 1950; returned to the EBU as TRT in 1972. The original company began test radio broadcasts in 1926, with a studio built in Istanbul in 1927 and a studio in Ankara in 1928.
|
n
|
[M]Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union[/M], created on February 12, 1950.
|
Türkiye Radyo Televizyon Kurumu, abbreviated as TRT - Turkish public broadcaster. Radio was founded on May 1, 1964, and television on January 31, 1968. About 70% of TRT funding comes from a tax on electricity bills and a license tax on TV and radio sets. The rest of TRT funding comes from government subsidies (around 20%) and the remaining 10% comes from advertising.
TRT was for many years the only provider of television and radio in Turkey. Before the introduction of commercial radio in 1990, and then commercial television in 1992, it had a broadcasting monopoly. The recent deregulation of the Turkish TV broadcasting market has led to the creation of analogue cable TV.
TRT's predecessor, Türkiye Radyoları, was one of the 23 founding organizations of the European Broadcasting Union in 1950; returned to the EBU as TRT in 1972. The original company began test radio broadcasts in 1926, with a studio built in Istanbul in 1927 and a studio in Ankara in 1928.
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e
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[M]Turkish Radio and Television Corporation[/M] (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, [M]is[/M] Turkey's [M]public broadcasting company.[/M]
|
Türkiye Radyo Televizyon Kurumu, abbreviated as TRT - Turkish public broadcaster. Radio was founded on May 1, 1964, and television on January 31, 1968. About 70% of TRT funding comes from a tax on electricity bills and a license tax on TV and radio sets. The rest of TRT funding comes from government subsidies (around 20%) and the remaining 10% comes from advertising.
TRT was for many years the only provider of television and radio in Turkey. Before the introduction of commercial radio in 1990, and then commercial television in 1992, it had a broadcasting monopoly. The recent deregulation of the Turkish TV broadcasting market has led to the creation of analogue cable TV.
TRT's predecessor, Türkiye Radyoları, was one of the 23 founding organizations of the European Broadcasting Union in 1950; returned to the EBU as TRT in 1972. The original company began test radio broadcasts in 1926, with a studio built in Istanbul in 1927 and a studio in Ankara in 1928.
|
e
|
[M]Turkish Radio and Television Corporation[/M] (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, [M]is Turkey's public broadcasting company.[/M]
|
Türkiye Radyo Televizyon Kurumu, abbreviated as TRT - Turkish public broadcaster. Radio was founded on May 1, 1964, and television on January 31, 1968. About 70% of TRT funding comes from a tax on electricity bills and a license tax on TV and radio sets. The rest of TRT funding comes from government subsidies (around 20%) and the remaining 10% comes from advertising.
TRT was for many years the only provider of television and radio in Turkey. Before the introduction of commercial radio in 1990, and then commercial television in 1992, it had a broadcasting monopoly. The recent deregulation of the Turkish TV broadcasting market has led to the creation of analogue cable TV.
TRT's predecessor, Türkiye Radyoları, was one of the 23 founding organizations of the European Broadcasting Union in 1950; returned to the EBU as TRT in 1972. The original company began test radio broadcasts in 1926, with a studio built in Istanbul in 1927 and a studio in Ankara in 1928.
|
e
|
[M]Turkish Radio and Television Corporation[/M] (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better [M]known by its acronym TRT[/M], is Turkey's public broadcasting company.
|
Türkiye Radyo Televizyon Kurumu, abbreviated as TRT - Turkish public broadcaster. Radio was founded on May 1, 1964, and television on January 31, 1968. About 70% of TRT funding comes from a tax on electricity bills and a license tax on TV and radio sets. The rest of TRT funding comes from government subsidies (around 20%) and the remaining 10% comes from advertising.
TRT was for many years the only provider of television and radio in Turkey. Before the introduction of commercial radio in 1990, and then commercial television in 1992, it had a broadcasting monopoly. The recent deregulation of the Turkish TV broadcasting market has led to the creation of analogue cable TV.
TRT's predecessor, Türkiye Radyoları, was one of the 23 founding organizations of the European Broadcasting Union in 1950; returned to the EBU as TRT in 1972. The original company began test radio broadcasts in 1926, with a studio built in Istanbul in 1927 and a studio in Ankara in 1928.
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e
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[M]Turkish Radio and Television Corporation[/M] ([M]Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu[/M]), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company.
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Türkiye Radyo Televizyon Kurumu, abbreviated as TRT - Turkish public broadcaster. Radio was founded on May 1, 1964, and television on January 31, 1968. About 70% of TRT funding comes from a tax on electricity bills and a license tax on TV and radio sets. The rest of TRT funding comes from government subsidies (around 20%) and the remaining 10% comes from advertising.
TRT was for many years the only provider of television and radio in Turkey. Before the introduction of commercial radio in 1990, and then commercial television in 1992, it had a broadcasting monopoly. The recent deregulation of the Turkish TV broadcasting market has led to the creation of analogue cable TV.
TRT's predecessor, Türkiye Radyoları, was one of the 23 founding organizations of the European Broadcasting Union in 1950; returned to the EBU as TRT in 1972. The original company began test radio broadcasts in 1926, with a studio built in Istanbul in 1927 and a studio in Ankara in 1928.
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[M]TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until[/M] the market was opened to private competition in [M]1992[/M].
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Türkiye Radyo Televizyon Kurumu, abbreviated as TRT - Turkish public broadcaster. Radio was founded on May 1, 1964, and television on January 31, 1968. About 70% of TRT funding comes from a tax on electricity bills and a license tax on TV and radio sets. The rest of TRT funding comes from government subsidies (around 20%) and the remaining 10% comes from advertising.
TRT was for many years the only provider of television and radio in Turkey. Before the introduction of commercial radio in 1990, and then commercial television in 1992, it had a broadcasting monopoly. The recent deregulation of the Turkish TV broadcasting market has led to the creation of analogue cable TV.
TRT's predecessor, Türkiye Radyoları, was one of the 23 founding organizations of the European Broadcasting Union in 1950; returned to the EBU as TRT in 1972. The original company began test radio broadcasts in 1926, with a studio built in Istanbul in 1927 and a studio in Ankara in 1928.
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TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until [M]the market was opened to private competition in 1992[/M].
|
Türkiye Radyo Televizyon Kurumu, abbreviated as TRT - Turkish public broadcaster. Radio was founded on May 1, 1964, and television on January 31, 1968. About 70% of TRT funding comes from a tax on electricity bills and a license tax on TV and radio sets. The rest of TRT funding comes from government subsidies (around 20%) and the remaining 10% comes from advertising.
TRT was for many years the only provider of television and radio in Turkey. Before the introduction of commercial radio in 1990, and then commercial television in 1992, it had a broadcasting monopoly. The recent deregulation of the Turkish TV broadcasting market has led to the creation of analogue cable TV.
TRT's predecessor, Türkiye Radyoları, was one of the 23 founding organizations of the European Broadcasting Union in 1950; returned to the EBU as TRT in 1972. The original company began test radio broadcasts in 1926, with a studio built in Istanbul in 1927 and a studio in Ankara in 1928.
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TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until [M]the market was opened to private competition[/M] in 1992.
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Türkiye Radyo Televizyon Kurumu, abbreviated as TRT - Turkish public broadcaster. Radio was founded on May 1, 1964, and television on January 31, 1968. About 70% of TRT funding comes from a tax on electricity bills and a license tax on TV and radio sets. The rest of TRT funding comes from government subsidies (around 20%) and the remaining 10% comes from advertising.
TRT was for many years the only provider of television and radio in Turkey. Before the introduction of commercial radio in 1990, and then commercial television in 1992, it had a broadcasting monopoly. The recent deregulation of the Turkish TV broadcasting market has led to the creation of analogue cable TV.
TRT's predecessor, Türkiye Radyoları, was one of the 23 founding organizations of the European Broadcasting Union in 1950; returned to the EBU as TRT in 1972. The original company began test radio broadcasts in 1926, with a studio built in Istanbul in 1927 and a studio in Ankara in 1928.
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[M]TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly[/M] until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
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Türkiye Radyo Televizyon Kurumu, abbreviated as TRT - Turkish public broadcaster. Radio was founded on May 1, 1964, and television on January 31, 1968. About 70% of TRT funding comes from a tax on electricity bills and a license tax on TV and radio sets. The rest of TRT funding comes from government subsidies (around 20%) and the remaining 10% comes from advertising.
TRT was for many years the only provider of television and radio in Turkey. Before the introduction of commercial radio in 1990, and then commercial television in 1992, it had a broadcasting monopoly. The recent deregulation of the Turkish TV broadcasting market has led to the creation of analogue cable TV.
TRT's predecessor, Türkiye Radyoları, was one of the 23 founding organizations of the European Broadcasting Union in 1950; returned to the EBU as TRT in 1972. The original company began test radio broadcasts in 1926, with a studio built in Istanbul in 1927 and a studio in Ankara in 1928.
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[M]It[/M] currently [M]manages[/M] more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and [M]a website[/M].
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Türkiye Radyo Televizyon Kurumu, abbreviated as TRT - Turkish public broadcaster. Radio was founded on May 1, 1964, and television on January 31, 1968. About 70% of TRT funding comes from a tax on electricity bills and a license tax on TV and radio sets. The rest of TRT funding comes from government subsidies (around 20%) and the remaining 10% comes from advertising.
TRT was for many years the only provider of television and radio in Turkey. Before the introduction of commercial radio in 1990, and then commercial television in 1992, it had a broadcasting monopoly. The recent deregulation of the Turkish TV broadcasting market has led to the creation of analogue cable TV.
TRT's predecessor, Türkiye Radyoları, was one of the 23 founding organizations of the European Broadcasting Union in 1950; returned to the EBU as TRT in 1972. The original company began test radio broadcasts in 1926, with a studio built in Istanbul in 1927 and a studio in Ankara in 1928.
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[M]It[/M] currently [M]manages[/M] more than 10 television channels, [M]eight national radio stations[/M] and a website.
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Türkiye Radyo Televizyon Kurumu, abbreviated as TRT - Turkish public broadcaster. Radio was founded on May 1, 1964, and television on January 31, 1968. About 70% of TRT funding comes from a tax on electricity bills and a license tax on TV and radio sets. The rest of TRT funding comes from government subsidies (around 20%) and the remaining 10% comes from advertising.
TRT was for many years the only provider of television and radio in Turkey. Before the introduction of commercial radio in 1990, and then commercial television in 1992, it had a broadcasting monopoly. The recent deregulation of the Turkish TV broadcasting market has led to the creation of analogue cable TV.
TRT's predecessor, Türkiye Radyoları, was one of the 23 founding organizations of the European Broadcasting Union in 1950; returned to the EBU as TRT in 1972. The original company began test radio broadcasts in 1926, with a studio built in Istanbul in 1927 and a studio in Ankara in 1928.
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[M]It[/M] currently [M]manages more than 10 television channels[/M], eight national radio stations and a website.
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Türkiye Radyo Televizyon Kurumu, abbreviated as TRT - Turkish public broadcaster. Radio was founded on May 1, 1964, and television on January 31, 1968. About 70% of TRT funding comes from a tax on electricity bills and a license tax on TV and radio sets. The rest of TRT funding comes from government subsidies (around 20%) and the remaining 10% comes from advertising.
TRT was for many years the only provider of television and radio in Turkey. Before the introduction of commercial radio in 1990, and then commercial television in 1992, it had a broadcasting monopoly. The recent deregulation of the Turkish TV broadcasting market has led to the creation of analogue cable TV.
TRT's predecessor, Türkiye Radyoları, was one of the 23 founding organizations of the European Broadcasting Union in 1950; returned to the EBU as TRT in 1972. The original company began test radio broadcasts in 1926, with a studio built in Istanbul in 1927 and a studio in Ankara in 1928.
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n
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TRT's predecessor, [M]Türkiye Radyoları[/M], was one of the 23 founding organizations of the European Broadcasting Union in 1950; [M]returned to the EBU as TRT in 1972[/M].
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Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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n
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TRT's predecessor, [M]Türkiye Radyoları, was one of the 23 founding organizations of the European Broadcasting Union in 1950[/M]; returned to the EBU as TRT in 1972.
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Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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n
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[M]TRT's predecessor, Türkiye Radyoları[/M], was one of the 23 founding organizations of the European Broadcasting Union in 1950; returned to the EBU as TRT in 1972.
|
Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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e
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[M]Before the introduction of[/M] commercial radio in 1990, and then [M]commercial television[/M] in 1992, [M]it had a broadcasting monopoly[/M].
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Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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e
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[M]Before the introduction of commercial radio[/M] in 1990, and then commercial television in 1992, [M]it had a broadcasting monopoly[/M].
|
Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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e
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Before the [M]introduction of[/M] commercial radio in 1990, and then [M]commercial television in 1992[/M], it had a broadcasting monopoly.
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Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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e
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Before [M]the introduction of commercial radio in 1990[/M], and then commercial television in 1992, it had a broadcasting monopoly.
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Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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n
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[M]TRT was for many years the only provider of[/M] television and [M]radio in Turkey[/M].
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Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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e
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[M]TRT was for many years the only provider of television[/M] and radio [M]in Turkey[/M].
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Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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Radio [M]was founded[/M] on May 1, 1964, and [M]television on January 31, 1968[/M].
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Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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[M]Radio was founded on May 1, 1964[/M], and television on January 31, 1968.
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Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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e
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[M]The recent deregulation[/M] of the Turkish TV broadcasting market [M]has led to the creation of analogue cable TV[/M].
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Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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n
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[M]The recent deregulation of the Turkish TV broadcasting market[/M] has led to the creation of analogue cable TV.
|
Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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n
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[M]The original company began[/M] test radio broadcasts in 1926, [M]with a[/M] studio built in Istanbul in 1927 and a [M]studio in Ankara in 1928.[/M]
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Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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n
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[M]The original company began[/M] test radio broadcasts in 1926, [M]with a studio built in Istanbul in 1927[/M] and a studio in Ankara in 1928.
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Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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n
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[M]The original company began test radio broadcasts in 1926[/M], with a studio built in Istanbul in 1927 and a studio in Ankara in 1928.
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Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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The rest of [M]TRT funding[/M] comes from government subsidies (around 20%) and [M]the remaining 10% comes from advertising[/M].
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Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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The rest [M]of TRT funding comes from government subsidies[/M] ([M]around 20%[/M]) and the remaining 10% comes from advertising.
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Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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[M]The rest of TRT funding comes from government subsidies[/M] (around 20%) and the remaining 10% comes from advertising.
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Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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n
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About 70% of [M]TRT funding comes from a tax on electricity bills[/M] and a license tax on TV and radio sets.
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Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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n
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About 70% of [M]TRT funding comes from[/M] a tax on electricity bills and [M]a license tax on[/M] TV and [M]radio sets[/M].
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Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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n
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About 70% of [M]TRT funding comes from[/M] a tax on electricity bills and [M]a license tax on TV[/M] and radio [M]sets[/M].
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Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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n
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[M]About 70% of TRT funding comes from a tax on electricity bills and a license tax on TV and radio sets.[/M]
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Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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n
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[M]Türkiye Radyo Televizyon Kurumu[/M], abbreviated as TRT - [M]Turkish public broadcaster.[/M]
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Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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[M]Türkiye Radyo Televizyon Kurumu[/M], [M]abbreviated as TRT[/M] - Turkish public broadcaster.
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Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (Turkish Türkiye Radyo ve Televizyon Kurumu), better known by its acronym TRT, is Turkey's public broadcasting company. It currently manages more than 10 television channels, eight national radio stations and a website.
The corporation was founded by the Turkish government in 1964 on the basis of the Türkiye Radyoları radio company, created in 1926. TRT maintained the state broadcasting monopoly until the market was opened to private competition in 1992.
Turkey is one of the founders of the European Broadcasting Union, created on February 12, 1950. It is also an active member of the Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union.
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber from [M]the Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats collection of poems[/M] by T. S.
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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[M]Cats is[/M] a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber [M]from the Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats[/M] collection of poems by T. S.
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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n
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[M]Cats is[/M] a musical [M]composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber[/M] from the Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats collection of poems by T. S.
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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[M]Cats is a musical[/M] composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber from the Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats collection of poems by T. S.
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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[M]The original London production[/M] ran for twenty-one years and the New York production for eighteen, both [M]setting a new record.[/M]
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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The original London production ran for twenty-one years and [M]the New York production[/M] for eighteen, both [M]setting a new record.[/M]
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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The original London production ran for twenty-one [M]years[/M] and [M]the New York production for eighteen[/M], both setting a new record.
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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[M]The original London production ran for twenty-one years[/M] and the New York production for eighteen, both setting a new record.
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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[M]Cats ranks[/M] fourth [M]on the list of shows with the longest run[/M] in Broadway history and [M]sixth on the West End.[/M]
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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[M]Cats ranks fourth on the list of shows with the longest run in Broadway history[/M] and sixth on the West End.
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, [M]the musical[/M] debuted in 1981 in the West End and a year later hit Broadway, [M]winning[/M] numerous awards including the Olivier and [M]the Tony for best musical[/M].
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, [M]the musical[/M] debuted in 1981 in the West End and a year later hit Broadway, [M]winning[/M] numerous awards including [M]the Olivier[/M] and the Tony [M]for best musical[/M].
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, [M]the musical[/M] debuted in 1981 in the West End and a year later hit Broadway, [M]winning numerous awards[/M] including the Olivier and the Tony for best musical.
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, [M]the musical[/M] debuted in 1981 in the West End and [M]a year later hit Broadway[/M], winning numerous awards including the Olivier and the Tony for best musical.
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, [M]the musical debuted[/M] in 1981 [M]in the West End[/M] and a year later hit Broadway, winning numerous awards including the Olivier and the Tony for best musical.
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, [M]the musical debuted in 1981[/M] in the West End and a year later hit Broadway, winning numerous awards including the Olivier and the Tony for best musical.
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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Directed by Trevor Nunn and [M]choreographed by Gillian Lynne[/M], [M]the musical[/M] debuted in 1981 in the West End and a year later hit Broadway, winning numerous awards including the Olivier and the Tony for best musical.
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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[M]Directed by Trevor Nunn[/M] and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, [M]the musical[/M] debuted in 1981 in the West End and a year later hit Broadway, winning numerous awards including the Olivier and the Tony for best musical.
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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Actresses Elaine Paige and [M]Betty Buckley[/M], who originated the character of Grizabella in London and Broadway respectively, [M]are especially associated with this musical.[/M]
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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Actresses [M]Elaine Paige[/M] and Betty Buckley, who originated the character of Grizabella in London and Broadway respectively, [M]are especially associated with this musical.[/M]
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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e
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Actresses Elaine Paige and [M]Betty Buckley[/M], who [M]originated the character of Grizabella in[/M] London and [M]Broadway[/M] respectively, are especially associated with this musical.
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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Actresses [M]Elaine Paige[/M] and Betty Buckley, who [M]originated the character of Grizabella in London[/M] and Broadway respectively, are especially associated with this musical.
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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[M]Actresses[/M] Elaine Paige and [M]Betty Buckley[/M], who originated the character of Grizabella in London and Broadway respectively, are especially associated with this musical.
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
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e
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[M]Actresses Elaine Paige[/M] and Betty Buckley, who originated the character of Grizabella in London and Broadway respectively, are especially associated with this musical.
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Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
|
e
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Among his famous songs, the theme "[M]Memory[/M]" stands out, which has become a standard and [M]has been covered by multiple artists.[/M]
|
Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
|
n
|
Among his famous songs, the theme "[M]Memory[/M]" stands out, which [M]has become a standard[/M] and has been covered by multiple artists.
|
Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
|
n
|
[M]Among his famous songs[/M], the theme "[M]Memory" stands out[/M], which has become a standard and has been covered by multiple artists.
|
Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
|
n
|
In 2019 [M]it was brought to the big screen under the direction of Tom Hooper.[/M]
|
Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
|
n
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[M]In 2019 it was brought to the big screen[/M] under the direction of Tom Hooper.
|
Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
|
n
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Its plot revolves around the tribe of [M]Jélicos cats[/M] during the night when they take [M]"the jelical choice"[/M] and [M]decide which of them will be reborn in a new existence[/M].
|
Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
|
n
|
[M]Its plot revolves around the[/M] tribe of [M]Jélicos cats during the night when they take "the jelical choice"[/M] and decide which of them will be reborn in a new existence.
|
Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
|
n
|
[M]Its plot revolves around the tribe of Jélicos cats[/M] during the night when they take "the jelical choice" and decide which of them will be reborn in a new existence.
|
Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
|
n
|
In addition, [M]it has[/M] been released in numerous countries throughout the world and has [M]been translated into a multitude of languages[/M].
|
Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
|
n
|
In addition, [M]it has been released in numerous countries throughout the world[/M] and has been translated into a multitude of languages.
|
Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber that premiered in London in 1981, but which continued to run for eighteen years on Broadway. To perform this show, Loyd set to music a series of poems by T. S. Eliot about cats, where Memory was the most successful song.
In the musical, the jellicle cats, a word that only they know its meaning, gather once a year so that their leader chooses one and only one of them to go to a better place. Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, Cats first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards. The London production ran for 21 years and the Broadway production ran for 18 years, both setting new records. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley became associated with the musical. One actress, Marlene Danielle, was in the Broadway production throughout its entire run (from 1982 to 2000).
In 1998, the musical was recorded on DVD at London's Adelphi Theater, featuring artists such as Elaine Paige, John Mills, Ken Page, Rosemarie Ford, Michael Gruber, John Partridge, Aeva May, Geoffrey Garratt, James Barron, Jo Gibb, among others.
|
n
|
Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "[M]Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.[/M]
|
Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber from the Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats collection of poems by T. S. Eliot. Its plot revolves around the tribe of Jélicos cats during the night when they take "the jelical choice" and decide which of them will be reborn in a new existence. Among his famous songs, the theme "Memory" stands out, which has become a standard and has been covered by multiple artists.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, the musical debuted in 1981 in the West End and a year later hit Broadway, winning numerous awards including the Olivier and the Tony for best musical. The original London production ran for twenty-one years and the New York production for eighteen, both setting a new record. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley, who originated the character of Grizabella in London and Broadway respectively, are especially associated with this musical.
Cats ranks fourth on the list of shows with the longest run in Broadway history and sixth on the West End. In addition, it has been released in numerous countries throughout the world and has been translated into a multitude of languages. In 2019 it was brought to the big screen under the direction of Tom Hooper.
|
n
|
Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, [M]Grizabela, the glamor cat[/M] and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
|
Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber from the Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats collection of poems by T. S. Eliot. Its plot revolves around the tribe of Jélicos cats during the night when they take "the jelical choice" and decide which of them will be reborn in a new existence. Among his famous songs, the theme "Memory" stands out, which has become a standard and has been covered by multiple artists.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, the musical debuted in 1981 in the West End and a year later hit Broadway, winning numerous awards including the Olivier and the Tony for best musical. The original London production ran for twenty-one years and the New York production for eighteen, both setting a new record. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley, who originated the character of Grizabella in London and Broadway respectively, are especially associated with this musical.
Cats ranks fourth on the list of shows with the longest run in Broadway history and sixth on the West End. In addition, it has been released in numerous countries throughout the world and has been translated into a multitude of languages. In 2019 it was brought to the big screen under the direction of Tom Hooper.
|
n
|
Among the most outstanding characters are [M]Munkustrap, the narrator of the story[/M], Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
|
Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber from the Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats collection of poems by T. S. Eliot. Its plot revolves around the tribe of Jélicos cats during the night when they take "the jelical choice" and decide which of them will be reborn in a new existence. Among his famous songs, the theme "Memory" stands out, which has become a standard and has been covered by multiple artists.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, the musical debuted in 1981 in the West End and a year later hit Broadway, winning numerous awards including the Olivier and the Tony for best musical. The original London production ran for twenty-one years and the New York production for eighteen, both setting a new record. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley, who originated the character of Grizabella in London and Broadway respectively, are especially associated with this musical.
Cats ranks fourth on the list of shows with the longest run in Broadway history and sixth on the West End. In addition, it has been released in numerous countries throughout the world and has been translated into a multitude of languages. In 2019 it was brought to the big screen under the direction of Tom Hooper.
|
n
|
[M]Among the most outstanding characters are[/M] Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "[M]Old Deuteronomy[/M]", the leader of the jellicle cats.
|
Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber from the Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats collection of poems by T. S. Eliot. Its plot revolves around the tribe of Jélicos cats during the night when they take "the jelical choice" and decide which of them will be reborn in a new existence. Among his famous songs, the theme "Memory" stands out, which has become a standard and has been covered by multiple artists.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, the musical debuted in 1981 in the West End and a year later hit Broadway, winning numerous awards including the Olivier and the Tony for best musical. The original London production ran for twenty-one years and the New York production for eighteen, both setting a new record. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley, who originated the character of Grizabella in London and Broadway respectively, are especially associated with this musical.
Cats ranks fourth on the list of shows with the longest run in Broadway history and sixth on the West End. In addition, it has been released in numerous countries throughout the world and has been translated into a multitude of languages. In 2019 it was brought to the big screen under the direction of Tom Hooper.
|
n
|
[M]Among the most outstanding characters are[/M] Munkustrap, the narrator of the story, [M]Grizabela[/M], the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
|
Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber from the Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats collection of poems by T. S. Eliot. Its plot revolves around the tribe of Jélicos cats during the night when they take "the jelical choice" and decide which of them will be reborn in a new existence. Among his famous songs, the theme "Memory" stands out, which has become a standard and has been covered by multiple artists.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, the musical debuted in 1981 in the West End and a year later hit Broadway, winning numerous awards including the Olivier and the Tony for best musical. The original London production ran for twenty-one years and the New York production for eighteen, both setting a new record. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley, who originated the character of Grizabella in London and Broadway respectively, are especially associated with this musical.
Cats ranks fourth on the list of shows with the longest run in Broadway history and sixth on the West End. In addition, it has been released in numerous countries throughout the world and has been translated into a multitude of languages. In 2019 it was brought to the big screen under the direction of Tom Hooper.
|
n
|
[M]Among the most outstanding characters are Munkustrap[/M], the narrator of the story, Grizabela, the glamor cat and "Old Deuteronomy", the leader of the jellicle cats.
|
Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber from the Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats collection of poems by T. S. Eliot. Its plot revolves around the tribe of Jélicos cats during the night when they take "the jelical choice" and decide which of them will be reborn in a new existence. Among his famous songs, the theme "Memory" stands out, which has become a standard and has been covered by multiple artists.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, the musical debuted in 1981 in the West End and a year later hit Broadway, winning numerous awards including the Olivier and the Tony for best musical. The original London production ran for twenty-one years and the New York production for eighteen, both setting a new record. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley, who originated the character of Grizabella in London and Broadway respectively, are especially associated with this musical.
Cats ranks fourth on the list of shows with the longest run in Broadway history and sixth on the West End. In addition, it has been released in numerous countries throughout the world and has been translated into a multitude of languages. In 2019 it was brought to the big screen under the direction of Tom Hooper.
|
n
|
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, [M]Cats[/M] first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and [M]won[/M] numerous awards, including [M]Best Musical at[/M] both Olivier Award Awards and [M]Tony Awards.[/M]
|
Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber from the Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats collection of poems by T. S. Eliot. Its plot revolves around the tribe of Jélicos cats during the night when they take "the jelical choice" and decide which of them will be reborn in a new existence. Among his famous songs, the theme "Memory" stands out, which has become a standard and has been covered by multiple artists.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, the musical debuted in 1981 in the West End and a year later hit Broadway, winning numerous awards including the Olivier and the Tony for best musical. The original London production ran for twenty-one years and the New York production for eighteen, both setting a new record. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley, who originated the character of Grizabella in London and Broadway respectively, are especially associated with this musical.
Cats ranks fourth on the list of shows with the longest run in Broadway history and sixth on the West End. In addition, it has been released in numerous countries throughout the world and has been translated into a multitude of languages. In 2019 it was brought to the big screen under the direction of Tom Hooper.
|
e
|
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, [M]Cats[/M] first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and [M]won[/M] numerous awards, including [M]Best Musical at[/M] both [M]Olivier[/M] Award [M]Awards[/M] and Tony Awards.
|
Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber from the Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats collection of poems by T. S. Eliot. Its plot revolves around the tribe of Jélicos cats during the night when they take "the jelical choice" and decide which of them will be reborn in a new existence. Among his famous songs, the theme "Memory" stands out, which has become a standard and has been covered by multiple artists.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, the musical debuted in 1981 in the West End and a year later hit Broadway, winning numerous awards including the Olivier and the Tony for best musical. The original London production ran for twenty-one years and the New York production for eighteen, both setting a new record. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley, who originated the character of Grizabella in London and Broadway respectively, are especially associated with this musical.
Cats ranks fourth on the list of shows with the longest run in Broadway history and sixth on the West End. In addition, it has been released in numerous countries throughout the world and has been translated into a multitude of languages. In 2019 it was brought to the big screen under the direction of Tom Hooper.
|
e
|
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, [M]Cats[/M] first opened in the West End in 1981 and then with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982 and [M]won numerous awards[/M], including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards.
|
Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber from the Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats collection of poems by T. S. Eliot. Its plot revolves around the tribe of Jélicos cats during the night when they take "the jelical choice" and decide which of them will be reborn in a new existence. Among his famous songs, the theme "Memory" stands out, which has become a standard and has been covered by multiple artists.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, the musical debuted in 1981 in the West End and a year later hit Broadway, winning numerous awards including the Olivier and the Tony for best musical. The original London production ran for twenty-one years and the New York production for eighteen, both setting a new record. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley, who originated the character of Grizabella in London and Broadway respectively, are especially associated with this musical.
Cats ranks fourth on the list of shows with the longest run in Broadway history and sixth on the West End. In addition, it has been released in numerous countries throughout the world and has been translated into a multitude of languages. In 2019 it was brought to the big screen under the direction of Tom Hooper.
|
e
|
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, [M]Cats[/M] first [M]opened[/M] in the West End in 1981 and then [M]with the same creative team on Broadway in 1982[/M] and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards.
|
Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber from the Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats collection of poems by T. S. Eliot. Its plot revolves around the tribe of Jélicos cats during the night when they take "the jelical choice" and decide which of them will be reborn in a new existence. Among his famous songs, the theme "Memory" stands out, which has become a standard and has been covered by multiple artists.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, the musical debuted in 1981 in the West End and a year later hit Broadway, winning numerous awards including the Olivier and the Tony for best musical. The original London production ran for twenty-one years and the New York production for eighteen, both setting a new record. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley, who originated the character of Grizabella in London and Broadway respectively, are especially associated with this musical.
Cats ranks fourth on the list of shows with the longest run in Broadway history and sixth on the West End. In addition, it has been released in numerous countries throughout the world and has been translated into a multitude of languages. In 2019 it was brought to the big screen under the direction of Tom Hooper.
|
n
|
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, [M]Cats[/M] first [M]opened[/M] in the West End in 1981 and then [M]with the same creative team on Broadway[/M] in 1982 and won numerous awards, including Best Musical at both Olivier Award Awards and Tony Awards.
|
Cats is a musical composed by Andrew Lloyd Webber from the Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats collection of poems by T. S. Eliot. Its plot revolves around the tribe of Jélicos cats during the night when they take "the jelical choice" and decide which of them will be reborn in a new existence. Among his famous songs, the theme "Memory" stands out, which has become a standard and has been covered by multiple artists.
Directed by Trevor Nunn and choreographed by Gillian Lynne, the musical debuted in 1981 in the West End and a year later hit Broadway, winning numerous awards including the Olivier and the Tony for best musical. The original London production ran for twenty-one years and the New York production for eighteen, both setting a new record. Actresses Elaine Paige and Betty Buckley, who originated the character of Grizabella in London and Broadway respectively, are especially associated with this musical.
Cats ranks fourth on the list of shows with the longest run in Broadway history and sixth on the West End. In addition, it has been released in numerous countries throughout the world and has been translated into a multitude of languages. In 2019 it was brought to the big screen under the direction of Tom Hooper.
|
n
|
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