Loew's Gates Theatre

1340 Broadway,
Brooklyn, NY 11221

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Showing 51 - 75 of 89 comments

Bway
Bway on March 14, 2005 at 4:52 pm

jseven, since you appear to be a member of the Pilgrim Church (the former Loew’s Gates Theater), do you have any photos of the interior of the building? Or even historic ones, I (and I am sure many others) would love to see them.
I have walked around the theater (church) some months ago, and it seems so well maintained on the exterior. I would love to see the interior. I only know of one photo (drawing actually) of the interior available on the web, and that is the one that is linked above:
http://pages.zdnet.com/kinema/id128.html

I also posted a link to the theater above (recent exterior shot from the sidestreet).
I believe that when your church first organized, they originally used the RKO Bushwick Theater when it first closed to movies, but then moved into the Loew’s Gates when it became available.
I would really love to see recent interior photos if you have any or know of any.

joyce
joyce on February 2, 2005 at 9:11 pm

Thanks for your reply Warren. I do live in Manhattan; that’s the easy part. Unfortunately he used 3 different names and Im not 100%positive which was the one he used professionally! This should keep me busy for quite a while.
joyz

joyce
joyce on February 1, 2005 at 10:23 pm

Back in the late 1930s, or maybe 1940, my father and his band played at the Loew’s Gates between movie showings. Does anyone know if the Loew’s corporation, or the theater, kept a log of who played there and when? My father is deceased and all we have is an old photo in which he is conducting his group. There are no dates on the photo but they are using music stands with the “LG” Loew’s Gates logo. Any suggestions?

JeJesus
JeJesus on January 21, 2005 at 10:52 pm

Dear Warren,
Yes, our church is really called, ‘Pilgrim Church’. When the building was originally bought, it was only going to be used for conventions, meetings, and special occasions. We still use it for those things except now, it’s mainly used as our “Father” church. The other churches that you saw listed are our affiliated churches (Pilgrim Church of New Lots Avenue and Rockaway Avenue). The building that you saw on Broadway, the one with the Renaissance Convention Center wording, is our “Father” church building (1338-44 Building). You’d be surprised at just how much the progress has been made on the inside. The renovations are fantastic. If you wish to ‘take a look’, please contact Pastor DeBora Crow at (718) 452-5180 Monday-Friday 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m., or feel free to pay us a visit at our 11:00 a.m. sunday services. Jeanne M.

JeJesus
JeJesus on January 21, 2005 at 10:33 pm

To:All,
Thank you so very much for your comments about the Loews Gates theatre in Bushwich, which is now The Pilgrim Church, my home church. Was very glad to finally see pictures of it (have heard many things good and bad, about it.), although it was mainly of the outside. Am now searching for pictures of the ‘old’ interior. The church was renovated by our Pastor Roy E. Brown, who also does interior designing.
For those of you who wish to see the interior of the ‘new’ building, as well as the exterior, please contact Pastor DeBora Crow at (718) 452-5180 Monday-Friday 9:00a.m.-5:00 p.m. Also, feel free to attend sunday services with us at 1338-44 Broadway, the location of the ‘old’ Loews Gates, at 11:00 a.m. We’ll be glad to see you. God be with you all. Jeanne M.

PeterKoch
PeterKoch on November 15, 2004 at 2:15 pm

A friend of mine at work once wrote a poem about church services as entertainment, titled, “Praise The Lord ! It’s Showtime !”

Bway
Bway on November 15, 2004 at 2:07 pm

Well, at least as a church, many of the theater elements do remain, because out of all the possible after-theater uses a theater can get, a church is probably the most kind, and least destructive to the integrity of the theater.

R143
R143 on November 15, 2004 at 1:41 pm

That is good news. The building is well maintained from what people have told us here, so this could mean that it is being maintained for the church, and could potentially one day become a theater again, if the neighborhood’s fortunes continue to reverse for the better. I wonder how the Housing Authority wound up with it, unless Loews just walked away from the building when the neighborhood went to hell in the 70’s.

romerol
romerol on October 20, 2004 at 3:40 pm

The only time I went to this theatre was in 1974 to
see Bruce Lee’s “ Enter the Dragon”.
By that time Bushwick was beginning its descent into
urban neglect.
It was a huge, ornately decorated with an upper balcony.
It was abandoned during the 80’s and it is now a church

R143
R143 on October 20, 2004 at 12:35 pm

Did the Gates have a smaller auditorium in addition to the main auditorium?

bushwickbuddy
bushwickbuddy on October 18, 2004 at 10:39 am

Wow! I hadn’t looked at this site yet and am glad I did. We used to go to the Gates quite a bit in the mid 1950’s and early 1960’s. Although I lived on Eldert and Central I usually walked at least one way to the theater. That was quite a trek, but we also used to walk to Highland Park which was also a good distance. I love this site and have recommended to multiple friends who also grew up in the Bushwick section during the 1940’s 1950’s and 1960’s. I have a website set up for our friends that has some interesting pictures – more people than places. If anyone would like an invitation please contact me at
BushwickBuddy

PeterKoch
PeterKoch on September 27, 2004 at 10:45 am

Again, Bryan Krefft, thank you.

Afcham
Afcham on September 11, 2004 at 8:24 pm

I spoke to one of the care takers a week ago, he invited me to the service on Sunday morning (perhaps in the future I will attend). From what I could see of the Gates Avenue Lobby, they have recently painted the interior and highlighted the details. From what I saw it appears to well maintained!

Bway
Bway on September 11, 2004 at 12:41 pm

Thanks so much Warren! What a beautiful place! From what it sounds like, the church has kept good care of it. (They keep the exterior in great shape, so I assume they have done the same on the interior. A real shame it can’t be a theater right now, but it faired much betteer than it’s neighbor, the Bushwick. A church is probably the next best use if it can’t be a theater or concert hall. And who knows, maybe one day in the future it has the hope of being a theater again, in the meantime it is being maintained. Some of these churches even rent the space out for movies, etc for extra money.
The all too rare interior shot. Keep them coming for any theater you may find them for, they are always welcome.

PeterKoch
PeterKoch on September 1, 2004 at 12:11 pm

Thanks, Apollo and Bway, for all this information. I know of the Lenape people from historic plaques in Thomas Paine Park at Foley Square near Federal Plaza in downtown Manhattan. The African American Burial Ground is near there also.

Afcham
Afcham on September 1, 2004 at 10:54 am

The large church you speak of is actually St. Johns. I believe it is still in use. That is where St. Johns University started. They built some houses around the old football field and it is some what run down. I am sure it has a following (Probably hispanics from Bushwick, like our Lady of Good Council on Putnam Avenue has).

Bway
Bway on September 1, 2004 at 8:08 am

It certainly is. Thanks for the history lesson. Brooklyn really fascinates me, and I am always hearing information on the history. I will have to drive by the Empire when I get a chance one day. It is amazing how many of these theaters survive as churches. Riding through the neighborhood shows many “real” church buildings, but apparently there are so many churches added to the neighborhood too, both with storefront churches, and all these theaters that are churches now.
One church that always interested me, not too far from the Loew’s Gates is a large abandoned church that can be seen from the el platform at Myrtle-Bway. It looks like it was a Catholic church but is all boarded up now.

Afcham
Afcham on September 1, 2004 at 4:08 am

Peter K: The Empire is a church. The exterior is stucco, which my father always pointed was prone to develop cracks. The exterior shows signs of multiple patched cracks (no recent paint). The interior is hard to describe. It is appearent they dont have the resources of other larger church congregations It’s not in horrible shape, but certainly not the best either. Walking in the Empire will not make your mind conjer up memories of grand old movie palaces'.
I still have not got to your question on Bushwick, but I will.
Brooklyn absorbed all of the other towns in Kings county. It first absorbed Bedford which was probably larger than Brooklyn. Bedford was only a town for a short period. It was given the status of township under the Charter of Liberties and Privileges (Which some refer to as Americas first constitution). When that charter was recinded it later became a hamlet in the village of Brooklyn and village in the Town of Brooklyn. There was talk of making it a town again, but it never happened and finally it was absorbed mainly in the Eastern District of Brooklyn. Bedford was large and retained its identity into the 1930’s. It had a community newspaper which merged with the Flatbush paper. I have a copy somewhere. Bedford’s eastern border was where Easern Parkway turns. It’s southern border was Empire Boulevard and during the first U.S. census, the census taker said he entered Bedford when he crossed Flatbush road (which was mainly west of present day Flatbush Avenue, an old Lenape Indian trail). Stiles, Kings county 1800 historian, said it included Wallabout bay (Brooklyn Navy Yard). There is a famous engraving in Stiles book called Bedford corners. Bedford Corners was located about where the Loews Brevoort was. That area was called Bedford Green and was developed after the turn of the century.
I spent the last year before learning about the local native people who were miss named by a amateur historian name Silas Wood, he created the myth of the thirteen tribes. He took those names from deeds and they don’t reflect reality, a great deal of Native people history is just lost! We do know the native people in the Metropolitan area were Lenape’s. The Lenape people were also in parts of New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Delaware. The Delaware were actually Lenapes’. The name Delaware came from I believe an English Gentlemen who was Governor of Delaware for one year (De La War was his name).
It is late, I hope this legible?

PeterKoch
PeterKoch on August 31, 2004 at 12:30 pm

Bway, the Empire has a page on this site. Maybe it’s time for us to team up for some Broadway-Jamaica walkin' !(as opposed to riding) : “A Walk Through Brooklyn Part II, With Bway and Peter.K”

Bway
Bway on August 31, 2004 at 12:06 pm

Was the Empire known by a different name? I can’t find it on the site. I can’t believe that there were so many theaters in both the Myrtle corridor and the Broadway corridor! Any information on the Empire would be appreciated. If it’s not on the site, maybe one of us can add it. Originally, the only theaters I know about on Broadway were the Commodore, the Broadway, and the RKO Bushwick. I eventually discovered the Gates, and now all these little theaters. I had no idea the Monroe and the Empire buildings still stood. I think I need to have a walking tour of Broadway one day when I am in the area!

PeterKoch
PeterKoch on August 31, 2004 at 10:11 am

Thank you, Apollo.

What is the Empire Theater, at Ralph and Lexington Avenues and Broadway, used for nowadays ? Please describe what the lobby looks like now, and the exterior and interior, if you can.

Regarding the Williamsburg-Bushwick border, if it’s any help, I just looked in my Hagstrom NYC 5 boro pocket atlas, and the Brooklyn postal zone 6 (Metropolitan) sits between postal zone 11 (Williamsburg) and postal zone 21 (Bushwick).

You probably know that “Brooklyn” was originally limited to what we would nowadays call “downtown Brooklyn”, and only later came to include the “eight towns” (or however many there were. They were named, and shown on a map, at the beginning of the excellent PBS documentary, “A Walk Through Brooklyn Part I, with Dick Hartman and Barry Lewis”). Brooklyn was a city in its own right before it was incorporated as one of the five boros of NYC in 1898. That is why the Brooklyn-Queens border is referred to this day as “city line” by some older New Yorkers.

Thanks for your attention.

Afcham
Afcham on August 31, 2004 at 1:43 am

The Loews Gates is well maintained. I was in the building two years ago and it looked almost the same as I remembered it from my childhood. On hot summer days I have seen the fire doors to the Theater left open (Gates Avenue side). The Pilgrim church apparently has the resources to maintain the Theater, it seems to be a fairly large congregation. The same can not be said for the Empire (I was in the Lobby of the Empire yesterday)!
I will see what I can find out about the Williamsburg Bushwick border.

PeterKoch
PeterKoch on August 30, 2004 at 2:13 pm

Thanks again, Apollo, for posting your movie memories above. “Forbidden Planet” is one of my favorite movies also. It must have been awesome seeing it at Loew’s Gates at age four ! Next time I watch it on home video, I will imagine it playing at Loew’s Gates forty seven years ago !

What does Loew’s Gates look like on the inside now, as the Pilgrim Baptist Church ? Does any trace of the theater’s former splendor remain within ?

Thanks also for the info on Broadway formerly named Division Street,separating Bedford from Bushwick. I’ve always thought of Broadway as the dividing line between Bushwick and Bed-Stuy.

When Williamsburg first separated from Bushwick, what was the boundary ?

Afcham
Afcham on August 30, 2004 at 5:31 am

I grew up going to the Loew’s gates and have been in there recently. I remember many a day in that Theatre. It is still very well maintained, but to be honest I liked the RKO Bushwick a little more, as nice as the Loew’s Gates is the Bushwick was a little more elegant.
There was a marquee on the gates Avenue side also and a entrance. I remember always entering on the Broadway side though, possibly exiting on Gates Avenue a few times. The first movie I remember seeing in my life was Forbidden Planet at the Loew’s Gates, I was about four. Till this day, that is my favorite movie.
Once again the south side of Broadway is Brooklyn, Bedford section and not Bushwick. Broadway was originally named Division street, because it seperated Bedford or Brooklyn from Bushwick. Williamsburg later seperated from Bushwick.
In the eighties there was an attempt to make ago of it as a Theatre and I do remember James Brown performing there in the early eighties.

lopes
lopes on August 15, 2004 at 12:27 pm

My first movie experience at the Loew’s Gates was a James Bond double feature in the 60s. The entrance was on Broadway with movie posters and several photo stills behind glass. I remember being very impressed with the lighting , color and feel of the interior.