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Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre

2000s in comedy2003 establishments in New York City2010s in comedy2014 establishments in CaliforniaChelsea, Manhattan
East Village, ManhattanFormer theatres in ManhattanImprov Theatre companies in New York CityImprovisational theatrePerformance art in New York City
11.4.10UprightCitizensBrigadeTheatreByLuigiNovi1
11.4.10UprightCitizensBrigadeTheatreByLuigiNovi1

The Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre (shorter UCB Theatre) is an American improvisational theatre company and training center founded by the Upright Citizens Brigade troupe members Matt Besser, Amy Poehler, Ian Roberts and Matt Walsh.Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, UCB had locations in the New York City neighborhoods of Hell's Kitchen and the East Village, and on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles. UCB was located in Chelsea West 26th Street location from April 2003 until November 2017, after which it moved to Hell's Kitchen, 555 West 42nd Street in December 2017. The second NYC theatre located in the East Village opened in 2011, and the Los Angeles expansion started in 2014.Members of the Upright Citizens Brigade originally trained with Del Close at Chicago's ImprovOlympic where they created their signature ASSSSCAT show, the success of which led to the troupe founding the UCB Theatre in New York City.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre
West 26th Street, New York Manhattan

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N 40.7475 ° E -73.9976 °
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West 26th Street 301
10001 New York, Manhattan
New York, United States
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Salumeria Biellese
Salumeria Biellese

On 8th Avenue and 28th Street, in the Chelsea area of Manhattan, (NYC), two friends from Italy opened an Italian deli in 1925. (Italian: Salumeria). A salumeria is a place where fresh meats are being processed and sold which are called Salumi. They called it Italian Salumeria Biellese-Groceries and Charcuterie. They made many of the Italian dry cured salted meats such as salame (Cured or cooked stuffed in an intestine casing), capocollo (cured neck meat made spicy and non spicy), mortadella (Cooked, baloney like meat with large fat chunks), zampino (Cooked, salami like meat, stuffed in the pork skin of the leg casing rather than an intestine casing), testa (head cheese. Made of all scraps mixed with gelatine then stuffed in a casing), sausages (salame like meat, stuffed in small and large intestine casings), and other deli items.Salumeria Biellese supplied restaurants with their sausages. They also prepared cooked meats such as roast beef, roast pork, sausages in tomato sauce, etc. Today Salumeria Biellese is at the corner of 8th Avenue and 29th street. It has added seating for those who chose to eat in. The menu has home cooked meals and hot and cold sandwiches, salads, etc. The owners expanded their production line with the opening of a factory in New Jersey. The partners also opened an Italian Restaurant called Biricchino at 260 west 29th street Manhattan. This business grew with the growing population of New York City and surrounding areas. Salumeria Biellese was selected as a recipient in the Slow food NYC with a seal of approval in 2010. This business is almost 100 years (in 2025) in the same area on 8th Avenue in NYC. Today the business is located at 8th Ave. and 29th street one block north from the former location.

Lamartine Place Historic District
Lamartine Place Historic District

The Lamartine Place Historic District is a small historic district located between Eighth and Ninth Avenues in the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City. It was designated by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission on October 13, 2009, and includes twelve mid-19th century rowhouses on the north side of West 29th Street from number 333 on the east end to number 355 on the west end. "Lamartine Place" was a name given to the street by the developers, William Torrey and Cyrus Mason, in order to give their project an identity distinct from the Manhattan street grid. The name honored the French writer, poet and politician Alphonse de Lamartine, who was instrumental in the foundation of the French Second Republic. As part of their efforts, Torrey and Mason constructed a park on the east end of the block, between 28th Street – which they were also developing as "Fitzroy Place" – and 29th Street. The park, which was called Lamartine Park, enhanced the desirability of the townhouses as homes, and this name and Lamartine Place appeared on maps until 1902. Wanting the same kind of continuity of design they have achieved at their earlier development at London Terrace on 24th Street between Ninth and Tenth Avenues, Torrey and Mason included covenants which limited the types of buildings that could be built on Lamartine Place. The units they built and sold were all Greek Revival rowhouses with consistent heights and setbacks; most of these were completed by 1849, while seven buildings at the western end were not finished until around 1852. Most of the buildings that remain today have been altered since, often with Renaissance revival elements.