Halsey Theatre

928 Halsey Street,
Brooklyn, NY 11233

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Showing 26 - 50 of 68 comments

Bway
Bway on July 15, 2008 at 10:49 am

…or even exterior ones…I don’t think I have ever seen a photo of it, and since it was so large, that is hard to believe.

Bway
Bway on July 15, 2008 at 10:49 am

Anyone know of any interior photos of the Halsey?

PeterKoch
PeterKoch on July 15, 2008 at 10:01 am

Thanks for the memories, zitch and Kevin Westley ! Keep ‘em coming !

geoj99
geoj99 on July 14, 2008 at 9:10 pm

Kevin,

i believe my grandparents lived there from 1953 till 1966 approximately….they moved to himrod street and knickerbocker ave….i remember playing in saratoga park….when you could not go on the grass and they had a park attendant……there was another movie theater in the neighborhood aside from the halsey that i used to go to….for a quarter you got 2 feature films….b- movies…cartoons during intermission and popcorn. i can’t rember the name…i think it was off bway
…i also remember one of the neighbors on the first floor left….her name was mrs halsey ( no joke) and she was african american i believe…..

zitch

IrishDJKevin
IrishDJKevin on July 14, 2008 at 8:46 pm

Zitch,

We lived on the 2 floor left. I have a picture of my grandmother looking out the window. You didn’t say want years the Eckhardts lived there. We moved out in 1962. I will ask my older brother if he remembers them.

Sevearl years ago a couple of guys cut up the bronze statue in Saratoga park in broad daylight and took it away. If I remember correctly it was 6 feet tall. I didn’t believe it so I went back to see for myself.

Pax et bonum,
kevin Westley

PeterKoch
PeterKoch on July 14, 2008 at 10:18 am

zitch :

The name of the owner of Proces' Bar being ‘Jim’ reads right. Thanks for the details of that trolley barn, and that old car that you used to sit in.

Yes, the park across the street from the Halsey Theater, Saratoga Park, is still there. There are some old and recent images of it on Bushwick Buddies.

When my father was a small boy in the 1920’s, he used to go with his grandma to the Imperial Theater on the northwest corner of Halsey Street and Saratoga Avenue to take her to see silent Western films. Her husband was a night watchman for the Brooklyn Chair Company, and was asleep during the day.

There is a page for the Imperial Theater on this site, and pictures of it on Bushwick Buddies. It is still there, and is now in use as a church, as so many old theaters are now, like the Colonial, the Empire, Loews Gates, and Loews Valencia.

Bway
Bway on July 14, 2008 at 9:49 am

The Park across from the old Halsey is still there, actually, it’s a really nice park.

geoj99
geoj99 on July 14, 2008 at 9:31 am

peter,

i believe the first name of the owner of proces bar was Jim??? there was an old trolley barn up the street on halsey going towards the el that was used for storage and car parking ……i remember my uncles talking about jackie g keeping his car there…it was diagonally right across from the theater……we used to sneak in there as kids and sit in an old convertable from ( guessing here) the 30’s that someone had stored there….i believe it was possible a packard…..would love to have that car today to restore….
is the park across the street from the halsey theater still there??? used to play there all the time while visiting my grandparents….

zitch

PeterKoch
PeterKoch on July 14, 2008 at 7:34 am

Welcome, zitch ! It appears we have much to talk about, and much in common. Thanks for sharing your memories of the Halsey and Ridgewood Theatres.

I have heard that Proces bar and grill was the basis of Jackie Gleason’s Joe The Bartender routine : with Frank Fontaine as Crazy Guggenheim, and the unseen Mr. Dunahy …. hee hee hee hee ….

Suggest you visit Bushwick Buddies at www.bushwickbuddies.com for more great memories, and pictures as well, if you haven’t already.

geoj99
geoj99 on July 13, 2008 at 9:57 pm

irish dj,

my mom used to go to the halsey theater back when jackie gleason got his start there…..my mom and uncles charles and john eckhardt grew up at 859 halsey street.
grandma and grandpa had the 1st floor right apartment……i remember as a child going by that theater and i believe it still had a gray marquee hung by two steel guy wires…..never got to go inside by my mom would remember that if folks would not like an act they would throw tomatoes at the vaudville folks!!! it was already converted to a factory by the time i was born…..my uncles hung out at Proces bar and grill…

small world….

zitch

PKoch
PKoch on November 2, 2006 at 4:33 am

Thanks, Warren, for also posting this on the Halsey Theater page.

I see Jackie Gleason got started in show biz here in 1931, not 1936.

PKoch
PKoch on June 6, 2006 at 6:20 am

Yes, Bway. Also The Colonial, at Bway, Rockaway Ave and Chauncey St. There was the smaller Imperial closer nearby the Halsey, on the northwest corner of Halsey Street and Saratoga Avenue, now a church, (you posted a recent photo of it), where my dad would see silent westerns with HIS Grandma Koch, my great-Grandma Koch.

Bway
Bway on June 6, 2006 at 6:00 am

It’s amazing that this theater even survived into the 1940’s. This seems like it was such a saturated area for movie theaters back then. There was literally almost a theater on almost every block. And that doesn’t even count all the “big player” theaters all in the middle of the smaller ones, like the RKO Bushwick and the Loews Gates.

IrishDJKevin
IrishDJKevin on October 9, 2005 at 2:27 pm

I was born in Evangelical Deaconess Hospital in 1948 and lived at 859 Halsey Street (between Saratoga and Howard) until 1962. I attended Our Lady of Good Counsel between Madison and Putnam (between Ralph and Patchen) and graduated in 1961. It is now an SRO. Here are a few comments, as best as I can remember:
• Halsey Theatre later became a factory for Merrimakers (spelling?). My mother worked there until 1963. They made party favors. On New Years Eve, she would point out the hats she made when we watched Guy Lombardo on TV. It took several months before she got rid of the “sparkle” on her person.
• Broadway Arena was where the fights were held.
• The chapter “Limo To Bushwick” is true. Gleason visited the block and sat in Saratoga park telling stories about the “old neighborhood”. I believe it was before 1961.
• The interior of Lady of Lourdes, (grotto behind the altar) was the most beautiful sight I remember as a child.
• Joe the bartender was actually the bartender at Proces’s bar on Halsey and Saratoga
• Frank Fontaine was not a member of Gleason’s original show. He came along later. I believe he developed the character, Crazy Guggenheim, before he joined Gleason’s show. I doubt that it was based on anyone Gleason knew from Bedford-Stuyvesant /Bushwick.
• Al’s Billard Academy on Broadway and Halsey was where Gleason learned how to shoot pool.

There was a great bakery on Saratoga towards Decatur, but I cannot remember the name.

I searched for the Halsey because of the 50 anniversary of the Dodgers winning the World Series.

DougDouglass
DougDouglass on February 9, 2005 at 8:51 am

Evangelical Deaconess is currently the Bushwick Outreach Program, a homeless shelter.

DougDouglass
DougDouglass on February 5, 2005 at 4:26 am

Bushwick Hospital is now a Juvenile Detention Center owned by the state.

deleted user
[Deleted] on February 4, 2005 at 6:46 pm

Crazy Guggenheim real name was Frank Fontaine he was very funny. He was from Massachusetts and maybe you didn’t know this but he had a good singing voice and made a few record albums.

PeterKoch
PeterKoch on February 4, 2005 at 4:47 pm

fritz :

Here’s the link to “Bushwick Buddies” :

http://www.MyFamily.com/

Here’s the link to the Times Newsweekly (former Ridgewood Times).
This week’s “Our Neighborhood” article is about German butcher shops and pork stores in Ridgewood :

http://timesnewsweekly.com/NewFiles/OURNEIGH.html

Peter K.

Fritz410
Fritz410 on February 4, 2005 at 4:39 pm

Peter K
I also was born in the Bushwick Hospital in 1940 same as your dad. When I grew up in the 50s the Lutheran Church your father went to was the Lutheran Church of our Savior. The pastor was
Theodore Muller- I attended the Church and was confirmed there.
I lived at 16 Eldert and I could actually go to the church thru my backyard.
As to the characters such as Crazy Guggenheim, I do not know. However growing up near Chauncey St. many people knew Gleason and they all had stories about his characters. I do not think anyone however claimed tobe Crazy Guggenheim- hmmm I wonder why?
My mother remembered Gleason from the Halsey Theater as the kid emcee with the pimply complexion.
Memories I have of the area are shopping with my mom at Trunz’s butcher on broadway and Schaffer-she would give the butcher hell if he left his thumb on the scale, Sperling greengrocer run by Irv across from Trunz, Phils newstand on Halsey and Broadway, dish night at the Colonial( I was forced to see Gone with the Wind about ten times),stickball, punchball(I was one of the best),stoopball, egg creams, knishes at the stand on Broadway and Covert.The Brooklyn Day Parade on Bushwick Ave- I think it was on June 5th and I remember seeing General Mc Arthur there.
Kelso gym I do not know.
As for Brooklyn buddies, I would like the link.

PeterKoch
PeterKoch on February 4, 2005 at 12:23 pm

Thank you, fritz, for those Gleason stories. Was Frank Fontaine’s character, Crazy Guggenheim, based on anyone Gleason knew from Bushwick ?

I was born in Evangelical Deaconess Hospital, which used to stand at the northern corner of Bway and Chauncey, in mid-November 1955. I lived in Ridgewood, on Cornelia between Cypress and Wyckoff, but my family and I knew Bushwick well.

My dad was born in October 1919, at the old Bushwick Hospital, which used to stand at Putnam and Howard Aves. His parents lived at 1044 Putnam Avenue at the time. He lived at six to a dozen addresses in Bushwick, the last one as a single man, 1454 Bushwick, between Chauncey and Pilling. My parents lived on Weirfield between Knickerbocker and Wilson, across the street from Irving Square Park, before I was born, and before they moved to Ridgewood.

My mom was born at 412 Harman St. My parents met at the Knights of Columbus at Bushwick and Hart.

Was Kelso’s Gym in “The Honeymooners” based on any real place in Bushwick ?

My dad remembers, among many places, Joe’s Barber Shop at Bway and Pilling, and Night In The Sky Chinese Restaurant, at the eastern corner of Bway and Cooper, by the stairs to the Chauncey St. el station. His boyhood church was Grace Lutheran on Covert between Bway and Bushwick.

Do you know about Bushwick Buddies ? Would you like the link ?

Fritz410
Fritz410 on February 4, 2005 at 12:10 pm

Peter K, I stand corrected.I lived on Eldert St. between Broadway and Bushwick and that was BKLYN 7. As for Jackie Gleason he was a regular in the neighborhood in the 50s. He drove a baby blue Cadillac with a leather top. As times he would go to Als Billard Academy on Broadway and Halsey.I guess he went there to play Al who was former champ of billards in New York.Many of Gleason’s characters
were thought to be caricatures of local people. For instance Joe the bartender’s bar resembled Proces,s bar on Halsey and Saratoga. In fact Gleason mentioned Proce in his show many times.An interesting story of Gleaason occurred once when this kid, Maxey saw Gleason and tried to take his picture. Gleason stopped him, threw his arm over his shoulder and said- come here kid-
and then had someone else take the picture with him and the kid.
That was class and Maxey was proud of his picture and he probably is
still proud of his picture. That was one story from Brooklyn near the Halsey Theater.

DougDouglass
DougDouglass on February 4, 2005 at 7:29 am

The 1939 WPA Guide to NYC describes the area south of Broadway to Fulton Street, east of Nostrand Avenue (including Chauncey Street) as Stuyvesant Heights. Bushwick is north of Broadway.

PeterKoch
PeterKoch on February 4, 2005 at 6:38 am

Fritz, thanks for the bit about the “prototype for the Honeymooners” apts.

The part of Chauncey Street between Bway and Fulton St., which includes # 358, is in postal zone 33 (Stuyvesant). The part between Bway and Central Avenue is in postal zone 7 (East New York). I still think of the area northeast of Broadway to the Bklyn-Queens boundary as Bushwick, and I always will.

Fritz410
Fritz410 on February 4, 2005 at 5:44 am

During the 1950s, I delivered the long Island daily Press to 358 Chauncey Street.
The houses there were four story flat front tenement buildings. The apartments were the prototype for the Honeymooners.
As for Chauncey Street being in Bed Stuy, I think that it was in mail zone Bklyn 7, which is East New York.

DougDouglass
DougDouglass on January 23, 2005 at 3:06 pm

The “Limo to Bushwick” chapter Peter K. mentioned was in “Jackie Gleason: An Intimate Portrait of the Greatest” by W.J. Weatherby. In remembering his mother, Jackie said “It was a rainy day like this for her funeral. We were living on this street then – Chauncey Street – number 358”. I recently went to the location. Two-story attached houses have replaced 356 through 364 Chauncey.