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Talk:Marquee (structure)

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It needs to be moved IMO.

This should be about building marquees like the type you see at movie theaters. --69.14.48.173 10:25, 17 August 2005 (UTC)[reply]

This article is about the aspect of a marquee which is not unlike a beer tent. The content of this article has the rowdy tone suggested by the term beer tent, and probably should be merged there. Something of the tent though, the temporary party or reception facility needs to be kept-- but we need to add a passage on the other more permanent structure, the marquee before so many hotels, theatres, and cinemas.Davidrowe 00:15, 11 September 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Oh and as the beer tent article states:

"A beer tent is a frequently used name for a large marquee on a people celebration"

a beer tent then, is a name for a marquee- a subcategory of marquee, not the opposite. So if this is merged, we still should have an article here.Davidrowe 00:50, 11 September 2005 (UTC)[reply]


A marquee can also be a large-free-standing tent, indeed not unlike a beer tent but also not necessarily a beer tent, maybe not unlike a circus big top. jon-starbuck 15:30, 8 February 2006 (UTC)Jonstarbuck[reply]

I agree with Jon Starbuck; the only use I've ever heard of the word marquee is to refer to a large tent, as used at a circus, wedding, or village / town fete. I didn't even know the term was used as described in this article until I came to wikipedia hoping for insight into the distinction between a marquee & a gazebo! My experience is in British English (England) and in south Asia. PeterParslow (talk) 16:29, 1 September 2016 (UTC)[reply]

american here. the "tent" version is not in use AT ALL in the states, even by those of us on a steady diet of UK tv. we have "beer tent", "wedding tent", "reception tent", etc., but no "marquee".

conversely, if the "theatre sign" version is so unknown in the UK (as above comments would indicate), it begs the question: what are THOSE called there?

btw, the important thing here is the SIGN. even if it's flat above the door without any sort of sidewalk overhang, i think most yanks would still call it a marquee. ditto a free-standing sign on a pole a few feet away. if it's a big sign, and it's listing the acts, it's a marquee.

a sign/sidewalk overhang for a hotel or other business just sporting its name, otoh, would generally NOT be called a marquee. all this stuff abt "awnings" and "canopies" in the article is a bit misleading; "infoboard" or "menuboard" would be a much closer synonym, imho.


i think it is also used as an adjective to mean "headliner". as in, a "marquee speaker" means one worthy of being on a marquee (even if there isn't actually one at the facility). marquee speaker at comiccon or at tedx, say, meaning one of the main ones. 2601:18A:8080:EA60:3DF6:6102:C5C7:5EAC (talk) — Preceding undated comment added 19:18, 1 September 2024 (UTC)[reply]

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