Luna Park
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Luna Park is originally the name of the second major amusement park at Coney Island, named for the spaceship in the Pan-American Exposition ride "A Trip to the Moon".
Luna Park is the name of several amusement parks:
- Lunapark, Berlin (1909-1933) was in its time the largest amusement park in Europe [1]
- Luna Park, Budapest
- Luna Park, Buenos Aires, the site of a sports arena
- Luna Park, Cleveland (1905-1929), former site of Luna Bowl stadium for American football and Negro League baseball games
- Luna Park, Coney Island
- Luna Park, Melbourne
- Luna Park, Moscow
- Luna Park, Obala
- Luna Park, Pittsburgh
- Luna Park (Luneur), Rome
- Luna Park, Seattle
- Luna Park Sydney
- Luna Park, Tehran - now known as Shahr-e Bazi
- Luna Park, Tel-Aviv
Other usages of the name Luna Park include:
- Luna Park, visited by the characters in the anime series Tsukihime, Lunar Legend
- Luna Park, theme park located on the Moon featured in season one of Futurama. It is known as the "happiest place orbiting earth"
- Luna Park, a play by Caridad Svich
- Luna Park, one of the buildings at the Boardwalk Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, it was demolished May 9, 2006
- Luna Park, a play by Donald Margulies
- Luna Park, a song on the Pet Shop Boys album Fundamental
- Luna Park, a song by 1970s Italian progressive rock cult group Semiramis
- Lunapark, an album by the band Luna
- Luna Park Gaming, a popular Internet gaming center in Bloomington, Il.
- Luna Park, an album by the Irish Gaelic band Kíla
- Luna Park, a hidden bonus track on the 2006 album Kick by English band White Rose Movement
[edit] See also
- Lunar Park, a novel by Bret Easton Ellis