- showtimes
- Programs
- @fter Midnite
- Artists for Alzheimer's
- Ballet in Cinema
- Big Screen Classics
- Box Office Babies
- Cinema in 70mm
- Coolidge Award
- Coolidge Destinations
- Coolidge Shorts
- Deaf and Hard of Hearing
- Goethe German Film
- Kids' Shows
- NT Live
- Off the Couch
- OnStage @ the Coolidge
- Opera in Cinema
- Science on Screen
- Senior Matinees
- Stage & Screen
- Talk Cinema
- The Sounds of Silents
- @fter Midnite
- Membership
- About
- About Us
- History and Mission
- Board of Directors
- Staff Members
- Press
- Support Us
- Purchase Gift Card
- Directions and Parking
- Contact Us
- About Us
- Rentals
close



Moviehouse One, our grand downstairs theatre, seats 440 people. The theatre features state-of-the-art film projection as well as a large stage ideal for panel discussions, Q&A's, and live performances.

Moviehouse Two used to be the balcony when the Coolidge was a one-theatre house. It is now a medium-size, 217-seat theatre featuring state-of-the-art film projection and audio, as well as a small stage ideal for director q&a's, small performances and group discussions.
The GoldScreen seats 14 in our plush deluxe seats and features high-definition digital projection
The Video Screening Room seats 45 and features high-definition digital projection.
The Pharaoh's Daughter
Sun, Dec 2
2hr 55mins // featuring:Svetlana Zakharova, Ruslan Skvortsov
A new production from Moscow's Bolshoi Ballet, starring Svetlana Zakharova as the Egyptian princess and Ruslan Skvortsov as the English Lord.
A young English Lord traveling through Egypt takes shelter in a pyramid with a group of Egyptian merchants. After a round of opium, he has a fantastic dream in which he is transported to ancient times and enchanted by a powerful Pharaoh’s daughter. Originally a hit when first staged in 1862, The Pharaoh’s Daughter fell out of favor with the Soviet regime. In 2000, Pierre Lacotte was commissioned to resurrect Petipa’s mighty Egyptian fresco, and it became a hit yet again.
Cast:
Aspicia, the Pharaoh’s Daughter: Svetlana Zakharova
Lord Wilson: Ruslan Skvortsov
John Bull, Lord Wilson’s Servant: Denis Medvedev
Ramze, Aspicia’s Nubian Slave: Nina Kaptsova
Music: Cesare Pugni
Author of the score’s version: Alexander Sotnikov
Choreographer: Pierre Lacotte (after the ballet of the same name by Marius Petipa)
Designer: Pierre Lacotte
Music Director: Pavel Klinichev
With the Orchestra of the Bolshoi State Theatre of Russia
With the Bolshoi soloists and the Bolshoi Corps de Ballet
