This is a list of theatres and live performance venues in San Francisco, California.[1][2] For more information on theater in San Francisco, see Culture of San Francisco - Theater.
Name | Address | Neighborhood | Seats | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alcazar Theatre | 650 Geary Street | Tenderloin | 511 | |
Bayfront Theatre | Fort Mason Center | home of BATS Improv | ||
Bayview Opera House | 4705 Third Street | Bayview | 300 | [3] |
Beverly Hills Playhouse of San Francisco | 414 Mason Street | Union Square | theater and acting school | |
Bill Graham Civic Auditorium | 99 Grove Street | Civic Center | 7000 | |
Bimbo's 365 Club | 1025 Columbus Ave. | North Beach | music venue | |
Bindlestiff Studio | 185 6th Street | South of Market | 80 | Filipino American performing arts center[4] |
Bottom of the Hill | 1233 17th Street | Potrero Hill | music venue[5] | |
Brava Theatre Center | 2781 24th Street | Mission District | 360 | dedicated to the expression of women, people of color, youth, LGBTQ and others[6] |
Brick and Mortar Music Hall | 1710 Mission Street | Mission District | music venue[7] | |
Cartwright Hotel on Union Square | Pacific Heights Room, 524 Sutter Street | Union Square | 80 | |
Castro Theatre | 429 Castro Street | Castro District | 1400 | primarily a movie house, but also used for live special events[8][9] |
Chancellor Hotel Theatre | 433 Powell Street | Union Square | hosts the San Francisco Magic Parlor | |
The Chapel | 777 Valencia Street | Mission District | music venue[10] | |
Club Fugazi | 678 Green Street | North Beach | 400 | formerly hosted Beach Blanket Babylon[11][12] |
Cobb's Comedy Club | 915 Columbus Ave. | North Beach | [13] | |
CounterPulse | 80 Turk Street | Tenderloin | previously at 1310 Mission Street[14][15] | |
Cowell Theatre | Fort Mason Center | 437 | venue for the New Pickle Circus[16] | |
Creativity Theater | Children's Creativity Museum, 221 4th Street | South of Market | 200 | formerly Zeum Theater, located in Yerba Buena Gardens |
Custom Made Theatre | 414 Mason Street | Union Square | 99 | intimate setting for modern plays and musicals, previously at 533 Sutter Street |
Curran Theatre | 445 Geary Street | Tenderloin | ||
Dance Mission Theater | 3316-24th Street | Mission District | ||
Diego Rivera Theatre | City College of San Francisco, 50 Frida Kahlo Way | Sunnyside | home of the mural Pan American Unity by Diego Rivera[17] | |
Feinstein's at the Nikko | 222 Mason Street | Union Square | music venue and nighclub | |
Fillmore Auditorium | 1805 Geary Blvd. | Fillmore District | 1,315 | music venue with standing room |
Gateway Theatre | 215 Jackson Street | Embarcadero | venue for the 42nd Street Moon, and frequent venue for Theatre Rhinoceros;[18] formerly the Eureka Theatre | |
Geary Theater | 415 Geary Street | Tenderloin | venue for the American Conservatory Theater | |
Golden Gate Theatre | 1 Taylor Street | Tenderloin | built in 1922, and once housed vaudeville acts; owned by SHN | |
Gough Street Playhouse | 1620 Gough Street | Cathedral Hill | 50 | venue for the Custom Made Theatre Co.[19] |
Grace Cathedral | 1100 California Street | Nob Hill | hosts concerts and events | |
Grand Theatre | Gray Area Foundation for the Arts, 2665 Mission Street | Mission District | former movie theater, now used for live performances | |
Great American Music Hall | 859 O'Farrell Street | Little Saigon | ||
Great Star Theater | 636 Jackson Street | Chinatown | music and event venue; previously 55 Taylor Street, and 923 Market Street | |
Herbst Theatre | San Francisco War Memorial and Performing Arts Center, 401 Van Ness | Civic Center | 928 | |
The Independent | 628 Divisadero Street | music venue in the Harding Theater building | ||
Intersection for the Arts | 1446 Market Street | Civic Center | established in 1965, the oldest alternative non-profit art space in the city | |
Lorraine Hansberry Theatre | 762 Fulton Street | Western Addition | African-American theatre | |
Louise M. Davies Symphony Hall | San Francisco War Memorial and Performing Arts Center, 201 Van Ness Street | Civic Center | venue of the San Francisco Symphony | |
Joe Goode Annex | Project Artaud, 401 Alabama Street | Mission District | [20] | |
Marines Memorial Theater | 609 Sutter Street | Lower Nob Hill | ||
Marrakech Magic Theatre | 419 O'Farrell Street | Tenderloin | featuring the magic of Peter Morrison | |
The Marsh | 1062 Valencia Street | Mission District | specializes in developing new performances | |
Theatre at MCCLA | Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts | Mission District | 150 | [21] |
New Conservatory Theatre Center | 25 Van Ness Ave. | Civic Center | ||
NOHSpace | Project Artaud, 2840 Mariposa Street | Mission District | venue of Theatre of Yugen[22][23] | |
SF Masonic Auditorium | 1111 California Street | Nob Hill | 3,481 | formerly known as Grand Masonic Auditorium and Nob Hill Masonic Auditorium |
Nourse Theater | 275 Hayes Street | Civic Center | 1,693 | venue of City Arts and Lectures[24] |
Oasis | 298 11th Street | South of Market | drag theater and cabaret[25] | |
ODC Theater | 351 Shotwell Street | Mission District | dance performances | |
Orpheum Theatre | 1192 Market Street | Tenderloin | 2,197 | built in 1926 and owned by SHN |
Palace of Fine Arts Theatre | Palace of Fine Arts, 3301 Lyon Street | Marina District | originally constructed for the 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition, has since been rebuilt, renovated and seismically retrofitted[26] | |
Peña Pachamama | 1630 Powell Street | North Beach | Bolivian restaurant and Latin dance shows | |
Phoenix Theatre | 414 Mason Street | Union Square | two stages: the 6th Floor Theatre, and The Annex[27] | |
Presidio Theatre | 99 Moraga Avenue | Presidio | [28] | |
Punch Line | 444 Battery Street | Financial District | comedy club | |
Regency Center | 1290 Sutter Street | Lower Nob Hill | 1,423 | music venue with four stages; the main stage is the Regency Ballroom |
Safehouse Arts | 145 Eddy Street | Tenderloin | formerly known as SAFEhouseARTS[29] | |
San Francisco Conservatory of Music | 50 Oak Street | Civic Center | includes three performance halls (Concert Hall, Recital Hall, and Osher Salon) | |
San Francisco Jazz Center | 201 Franklin Street | Hayes Valley | ||
San Francisco Playhouse | 450 Post Street | Union Square | 199 | traveling theater company that performs political musicals[30] |
South of Market Cultural Center | 934 Brannan Street | South of Market | managed by SOMArts[31] | |
Strand Theater | American Conservatory Theater, 1127 Market Street | Civic Center | [32] | |
Theatre du Lycée Français de San Francisco (TLF) | Lycee Francais de San Francisco, 1201 Ortega Street | Sunset District | 325 | [33] |
Venetian Room | Fairmont San Francisco | Nob Hill | venue for cabaret performances,[34] and where Tony Bennett first sang, "I Left My Heart in San Francisco"[35] | |
Victoria Theatre | 2961-16th Street | Mission District | plays, live concerts, film festivals, musicals, and other kinds of events | |
Walt Disney Family Museum Theater | Presidio Main Post | Presidio | ||
The Warfield | 982 Market Street | Civic Center | large music venue | |
War Memorial Opera House | San Francisco War Memorial and Performing Arts Center, 301 Van Ness Street | Civic Center | venue of the San Francisco Opera and San Francisco Ballet | |
Yerba Buena Center for the Arts | 701 Mission Street | includes the Novelius/YBCA Theatre or Blue Shield of California Theater | ||
Z Space | Project Artaud, 450 Florida Stree | Mission District | home of the theatre company of the same name, with a main stage, and the smaller Z Below theater[36] |
Next December, CounterPULSE's lease at 1310 Mission Street will expire, leaving the 22-year-old experimental performing arts venue without a home. The worst case, and most likely scenario, subjects them to eviction or a dramatic (and unaffordable) rent increase—CP is located around the corner from the new Twitterplex, so one can only imagine how landlords would jack the cost. Fortunately, thanks to a progressive, charitable act, they will move into the landmark historical building at 80 Turk (that full-of-TL-flavor block between Taylor and Mason). The building dates back to 1922 and has gone through many incarnations over the decades, first as a gambling hall, then as the Buccaneer Tavern in the 1930s, the Gayety Theater (shown in B&W here) in the 1960s, and then the Dollhouse Theater porn palace until the early 90s when it fell into disrepair (and was likely used for illegal raves, as evidenced by international DJ tags on the basement walls).