Movie theatres in New York City will partially reopen next month, Governor Andrew Cuomo has announced.
Cuomo said cinemas will be able to operate at 25 percent capacity, or up to 50 people per screen, from March 5 – almost exactly a year since they shut.
New York City cinemas get greenlight to open from March 5 https://t.co/ttWP0rZuTa pic.twitter.com/mFYAObAVYh
— Screen International (@Screendaily) February 22, 2021
"Assigned seating, social distancing and other health precautions will be in place," Cuomo wrote on Twitter.
Officials closed movie theaters on March 17 last year as Covid-19 began ravaging America's commercial capital, where the disease has now killed almost 29,000 people.
Start your week off right by watching these students from the Dance Theatre of Harlem dancing in New York City
— TG (@TG22110) February 15, 2021
pic.twitter.com/9R9eCRKrpo
In a statement sent to AFP, AMC's CEO Adam Aron announced that the chain's 13 movie theatres in New York would reopen on March 5.
AMC is the biggest cinema chain in the United States.
But Andrew Elgart, who owns three independent movie theatres in New York, told AFP he probably would not reopen on March 5, although he is considering the possibility of doing so later.
He said it wasn't clear that reopening would be profitable under the current pandemic conditions.
The first film to get a post-lockdown release date in the UK is My New York Year (aka My Salinger Year), starring Sigourney Weaver and Margaret Qualley, which @VertigoRel plan to release in cinemas on May 17. More titles to come... https://t.co/zuMQU9lKQE
— Michael Rosser (@MichaelRosser) February 23, 2021
Cuomo has been gradually easing restrictions in New York City in recent weeks as positivity rates fall.
Limited indoor dining returned on February 12, with restaurants allowed to seat customers indoors at 25 percent capacity.
Large arenas, including sports stadiums, are able to reopen at 10 percent capacity this week.
Orson Welles produced and directed the stage version of Richard Wright's Native Son in 1941. It starred Canada Lee and ran for 114 performances at St. James Theatre in New York City.
— Noir Alley (@NoirAlley) February 18, 2021
See the 1951 film version this Saturday and Sunday on #NoirAlley. pic.twitter.com/OUSOAbH8VN
The New York Knicks and the Brooklyn Nets are set to play in front of 2,000 fans at their respective home games at Madison Square Garden and the Barclays Center on Tuesday.
New York City's seven-day rolling average of positive test results is hovering above the four percent mark, down from more than six percent in early January, according to state figures.
This article has been adapted from its original source.