Gotta love this place. The floor is at a slant so even in the back the view is good. Great sound and seating in the back if you don't want to enter the fray.
Medium size. Cleanbathrooms. Decent acoustics. Stand and rock out or go to back for stadium style seating. Basementbar has more secluded lounge area, w/TVs & speakers so you don't miss anything.
Great sounding venue, genuinely good people working the bar. If you gotta pee, just ignore the dude not making sense screaming non-words and clutching a pair of Bud Lights. He’ll go away. Eventually.
Great little venue that's hosted a variety terrific acts from Modern Baseball to SuicideGirls, Travi$ Scott to Japanese rock band The Pillows, and Anberlin's final NYC show.
The theatre was originally called the Gramercy ParkTheatre upon being built in 1937 to avoid confusion with the pre-existing Gramercy Theatre located on First Ave.
Amazing, small intimate venue with both GA and stadium seating farther back. Don't buy VIP, it's a ripoff and seats aren't guaranteed so you might just $20 for no reason.
If you're staying at a hotel on the other side of the river, take the train across and then get a taxi. Do the same on the way back. Taxi drivers don't like having to go over the river.
Rarely do any bands start within 45 minutes of the doors opening. Skip waiting in line and show up later. The Globe down the street has good beers and burgers.
If you prefer a more laid backconcert experience, head downstairs to the lounge. They have televisions set up so you can watch what’s going on upstairs at the show. – Team Live Nation
The Live Nation Ticket fairy sometimes hands out free tickets to upcoming events at Gramercy. If u follow @livenationnyc on twitter, we send out hints for what shows she will be at! – Team Live Nation
In 1950, the theatre was considered an "art house" due to eclectic programming, no admittance near the end of a film (unheard of back then), and coffee served in the waiting area.
In 1950, the theatre was considered an "art house" due to eclectic programming, no admittance near the end of a film (unheard of back then), and coffee served in the waiting area.