Gratis
Apoyo
Starline Tours has been giving celebrity tours of Los Angeles for over 80 years. We’ve seen Hollywood history unfold as it happened, and our guides have deep knowledge and fascinating insights that will enrich your experience. Starline Tours pioneered the famous Movie Stars’ Homes Tour in 1935, and is today the premier sightseeing tour company in Los Angeles, providing daily guest shuttles from more than 250 hotels in the Los Angeles area to terminals at the Chinese Theatre / Hollywood Walk of Fame If you chose not to get picked up at your hotel, this tour departs from our Hollywood Terminal located outside the TCL Chinese Theatre at the Hollywood & Highland Center at 6925 Hollywood Boulevard. There is parking available at the Hollywood & Highland Center. It is an underground parking structure with entrances at 1755 N. Highland Ave. (next to the Loews Hollywood Hotel) and at 1754 N. Orange Dr. Please make sure to bring your parking stub to the tour, so they can validate it for a parking discount.
Are there any age restrictions? Children are welcome on the tour, but please bear in mind that some children have a limited attention span and therefore a 3 hour tour may not be appropriate for them. Parents know their children best and should assess the situation individually. Since there is a lot of standing and walking please consider this when deciding whether the tours are appropriate for your child. Also, the tours require a certain level of physical stamina. For our walking tours, we are on our feet for approximately 3 hours. How physically fit do I need to be to enjoy this tour? Tours walk at an easy pace and cover approximatley 1 mile of walking. Our tours are generally appropriate for all ages and fitness levels, but please use your best judgment. Is smoking allowed on the tour? The tours maintain a no-smoking policy. Does the tour guide accept gratuities? Gratuities are greatly appreciated, although not mandatory. Are cameras allowed on the tours? Yes! In fact, we strongly encourage participants to take photos during the tour. However, we do not allow video cameras or tape recorders.
The Queen's Gallery was built in the shell of the former Holyrood Free Church and Duchess of Gordon’s School at the entrance to the Palace of Holyroodhouse. The buildings were constructed in the 1840s with funds from the Duchess of Gordon, but fell into disuse in the late 19th century. Benjamin Tindall Architects were appointed project architects for the new Queen’s Gallery in October 1999. Their central visual theme was a celebration of The Queen’s Golden Jubilee, expressed through a series of arches and screens that lead visitors from the Gallery entrance to the exhibition spaces beyond. Their design complements the original 19th-century architecture, elements of which were incorporated into the new spaces. Unsympathetic later internal alterations were removed, and a new exposed steel and concrete floor inserted to reflect the original ‘gallery’ of the Church. A new stone arched entrance was created at the centre of the Horse Wynd frontage, opposite the new Scottish Parliament building. The use of a stone archway, with a courtyard beyond, is a traditional entrance device in Scottish architecture. The main walling is of Catcastle stone, the dressed work and lettering is of Stainton stone and the base is of Kenmay granite. ‘THE QUEEN’S GALLERY’ lettering above the entrance is the work of John Neilson, a calligrapher and carver. The letters were cut from single pieces of stone. Above sits Scotland’s heraldic lion, designed by Jill Watson. The lion sedant is based on a small red lion that sits at the feet of Mary, Queen of Scots on her tomb in Westminster Abbey. (The Palace of Holyroodhouse was once home to Mary, Queen of Scots.) The monumental entrance doors of oak have gilded bronze hinges by Jill Watson. Continuing the heraldic theme, the main hinges are decorated with the Scottish lion and unicorn. The beasts are set against the adjacent urban scene of Edinburgh’s Royal Mile and the rural scene of Arthur’s Seat and Salisbury Crags. The upper hinges are made as golden boughs of flowering native trees – chestnut and laburnum, oak, rowan and hawthorn. The stone archway is decorated with a carved and gilded garland of Scottish flowers, including daisies and thistles, created by Graciela Ainsworth, an Edinburgh-based sculptor, carver and conservator. Over the old entrance to the former church is a stained-glass window by Christian Shaw. The design shows a perspective drawing of the interior of a gallery. At night, the shape of the archway is reflected by the glass lights by Keiko Mukaide set into the paving. The artist has given the tiles a water flow pattern, mirroring the stream of visitors walking in and out of the Gallery. Inside, the reception desk by Hamid van Koten is made from curved pieces of Scottish elm with kilned glass and patinated copper. The pendant lights were designed and made in Edinburgh by Ingrid Phillips. Dividing the reception from the main Gallery area is a patterned glass screen by Jacqueline Poncelet. The screen’s bronze handles by Jill Watson incorporate figures looking at art in a gallery. The dramatic central stair of native timber leads to the Gallery spaces above. The complex shape was designed by the architects with Charles Taylor Woodwork, who were responsible for the construction. Lights set into the first floor illuminate the curved balustrading.
EL ESPECTÁCULO DE CRAZY HORSE Feminidad, creatividad y audacia... El Cabaret más Vanguardista de París revela sus encantos con un espectáculo llamado “Désirs” dirigido por el prestigioso coreógrafo francés Philippe Decouflé y el director artístico Ali Mahdavi. Dentro del inacabable tema de la feminidad, Désirs es una sucesión de matrices brillantes, sorprendentes, descaradas y con glamour. « Chuchotements », « Upside Down », « Rougir de désir » … las creaciones combinan la estética moderna con la absoluta: luces « made in Crazy », efectos especiales sorprendentes, disfraces preciosos y elegantes, nuevos ritmos musicales... ¡Inolvidable! Zula Zazou, Jade Or, Psykko Tico o Nooka Karamel: los bailarines con nombres quiméricos, la élite de la seducción con cuerpos perfectos y arqueados mantienen el misterio de su increíble belleza. su gracia inefable. En el escenario, las chicas de Crazy, sensuales y evocadoras de la leyenda, componen las estrellas de este cielo mítico de la noche parisiena. Désirs firma el eterno retorno de lo loco...
Get up close and personal to Manhattan's famed Macy's 4th of July fireworks spectacular, aboard a fun and casual cruise on the Hudson. Circle Line gives you a front row seat to the brilliant display of pyrotechnics. Premium Experience tickets include festive 4th of July menu and open beer, wine and soda bar.
Richard Marx the man behind the worldwide classic Right Here Waiting is coming to Las Vegas and you can see him with discount concert tickets from ShowTickets.com