Apollo Theatre

223 W. 42nd Street,
New York, NY 10036

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42ndStreetMemories
42ndStreetMemories on June 5, 2005 at 9:35 pm

AlAlvarez,

I have an ad from the 50s when the Apollo was showing NANA with Charles Boyer. The distributor’s ad reads “spicy adult cinema package”. As Gerald mentions. “sex sells”….that’s Marketing 101.

But “grandad of porn”, “stupid history games”???? That ad, like most, was prepared by the film’s distributor. And if the Apollo is to be signaled out….‘respectable’ theaters such as the Beekman, Art, Gramercy, Symphony can also be attibuted to the parenting of porno. They are listed in the ad, as well.

If you were there, you know that the Apollo had some of the most respectable programming on the street. As far removed from porno as the Times Square’s action fare.

JACK D…..please contact me at .com I would like to discuss the programming on 42nd during the 50s – 60s. Thanks.

Jerry

Al Alvarez
Al Alvarez on June 4, 2005 at 10:55 pm

Gerald, my point is that the Apollo, unlike any other New York arthouse, ALWAYS stressed the sex angle of its films even when there was none. Only the Apollo sold a war drama like BEFORE HIM ALL ROME TREMBLED as “earthy sexuality in great abundance”. It is common knowledge that foreign film distributors often used sex angles to entice American audiences to see them but these quotes rarely used on first-run and the Apollo used them weekly.

Forty second street theatres had a tradition of making promises of sex in films that did not deliver. My point is that the Apollo was the first to blatantly do this and probably invented the concept.

THE BICYCLE THIEF indeed was censored by the city of New York (trouble with the scene of the boy urinating in the street)and had many problems at the World 49th. BITTER RICE, OPEN CITY and THE IMMORAL MR. TEAS also had censorship probelms at the World 49. It is because of this that DEEP THROAT gained credibility as something to be protected by the first amendment. New Yorkers knew that the World 49 had faced this nonsense before.

The Apollo was eclipsed by more blatant sex films in later years but for proof that arthouse lead to porn you need look no further than the booking history of the World 49th and, of course, the selling of the films of Brigitte Bardot. The World 49 had nowhere to go after hard core.

Jerry Lewis Cinemas certainly helped spread porn to middle America. The franchise owners were losing their shirts with family films and switched to porn usually with DEEP THROAT. I do not deny the Apollo was a great house (I was never lucky enough to see it) but I think it should be duly noted, along with the World 49, for its important place in the history of film sexploitation marketing. I can assure you CHILDREN OF PARADISE, a fine film no doubt, did not exude sex appeal before or after its Apollo run.

Gerald A. DeLuca
Gerald A. DeLuca on June 3, 2005 at 10:27 am

Saps, it’s Johnston, RI. It is no longer a porno cinema, just a porno shop. It is listed on Cinema Treasures as Johnston Cinema. Click here.

Mike (saps)
Mike (saps) on June 3, 2005 at 12:17 am

What town is that, Gerald? Maybe I’d like to check out that Jerry Lewis cinema.

Gerald A. DeLuca
Gerald A. DeLuca on June 2, 2005 at 10:57 pm

To AlAlvarez: Much of that phraseology was contained in the distributor press books! So what? It is a big damn leap from that to saying the Apollo was the granddad of porn. I have the original press book and newpaper ads for “The Bicycle Thief” put out by distributor Mayer-Burstyn, emphasizing the shapely leg of Antonio’s wife on a bicycle, which hardly reflects the nature of the film at all. Does that make “The Bicycle Thief” the granddad of porno movies?

And whether this kind of promotion was offered by the distributor publicity departments or the exhibitors themselves, sex, sexiness, sex appeal are widely used to promote entertainment, not to mention toothpaste. Sex sells, the hint of the illicit sells! But it’s not necessarily a rehearsal for pornography. When Colgate markets a toothpaste showing a sexy woman smiling provocatively at you, is that a preparation for their new line of porno-paste?

It’s a big leap that you are making. It is far-fetched. You are truly way off on this. Does that mean the Apollo could never have become a porn theatre??? Of course it could have, but it did not. It might have become one too if if had previously been showing only “The Sound of Music,” “Mary Poppins” and “Pinocchio.” On the other hand many Jerry Lewis cinemas, built for family entertainment, became porno houses less than a decade after they were built to entertain families. There is one in my town.

What I am telling you is that there is no connection between a theatre saying “Children of Paradise” exudes sex appeal and the ultimate programming of hard core. “Deep Throat,” incidentally, opened at New York’s World Theatre, which had made a reputation showing neo-realist classics and other worthy films in the postwar years. In conclusion, what you assert makes no sense at all. None at all. And nothing can detract from the historical fact that the Apollo was a fabulous place to catch some great international cinema.

Al Alvarez
Al Alvarez on June 2, 2005 at 7:22 pm

Here are some samples of Apollo ad copy from the early 1948 New York Times.

CHILDREN OF PARADISE
“Exudes sex appeal!”

OPEN CITY
“Violence and plain sexiness!”

PASSIONELLE
“ A tale of illicit love”

TORMENT
“A study of sex and sadism”

FURIA
“Strips down to the bare facts”

Each one was accompanied by a drawing of a young lady in a low cut blouse. Yes, that MUST HAVE BEEN art the Apollo was selling!

sasheegm
sasheegm on June 1, 2005 at 10:31 pm

Jack D: It was great reading your recollections of old 42nd st and its Movie Houses…….I dont know if you were the booking agent back in the 50s when I went there, but if you were, a heart felt Thank You, for all the memories you supplied for me & many others at the Apollo and the other houses on that strip……..Joe From Florida—-sasheegm

jackdecrescente
jackdecrescente on June 1, 2005 at 9:27 pm

Bravo to those who remember the Apollo as she truly was, the theatre that brought foreign film to the masses at reasonable prices. Yes, the Apollo 42nd Street, as it was known in order to differentiate from the Apollo 125th Street, was a grind house, but it was foreign, art, or upscale domestic film that glowed on that silver screen. At least that was true during the 1950’s, 60’s and early 70’s. The Apollo, like all 42nd Street theatres, changed prices several times a day. Prices ranged from $.35 from 8 to 10 in the morning up to $1.25 weeknights or $1.50 weekend evenings. Broadway theatres were charging several dollars more while both 42nd Street and Broadway played day and date.

In later years, as more and more art houses opened, the Apollo 42nd Street played only English language films, but still on the more upscale side. Eventually, the 42nd street entrance was closed and turned into a storefront, while the 43rd Street entrance, directly across from the New York Times Building, and the theatre itself were refurbished. The theatre was renamed the New Apollo, and went on to host such legitimate bills as THE FIFTHH OF JULY, BENT and ON GOLDEN POND.

In truth, most of the 42nd street theatres never played porn. Each theatre actually had a genre of film in which it usually specialized. The Victory Theatre was indeed a porn house, playing a film called THE PINK PUSSYCAT for more than a year. However, the Lyric, New Amsterdam, Selwyn and Harris played first run, day and date with Broadway. The Times Square played westerns during the week and gladiator type films on Sundays. The western bills would change three times a week, with a new show every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. The Liberty and Anco theatres were mainly used as move over houses. A show (two features, a cartoon and a short) would, for instance, play one week in the Lyric and then move over for a second and possibly subsequent weeks to the Liberty. THE FISH THAT SAVED PITTSBURGH actually played the Liberty for several months.

The Laff Movie, a.k.a. the Empire, was moved several feet down the block towards 8th Avenue to become the entrance to the new AMC Empire. The Empire played mostly kung fu triple bills toward the end of the 80’s and into the 90’s. There were several storefronts that were turned into small porno houses for a period of time. But generally speaking the bulk of the historic theatres that were and in many cases still are 42nd Street played the same titles that were playing right around the corner on Broadway for many times the price.

I was the head film buyer for the Lyric, Apollo 42nd Street, Selwyn, Liberty, Times Square, Empire and Victory Theatres for more than twenty years.

Gerald A. DeLuca
Gerald A. DeLuca on May 30, 2005 at 11:30 am

Joe, good comment about the true nature of the Apollo. Unlike a recent comment writer, I would not refer to the Apollo as the “granddad of porn”…a ridiculous term. Willy-nilly, it was closer to being the granddad of the Walter Reade or the Film Forum. I’m certain too that Scorsese saw many movies there, given his voracious appetite.

We were born the same year, by the way, and seem to have shared the same tastes, judging by his great documentary on the Italian cinema “My Voyage to Italy.” No doubt all of the films he discusses in his movie played the Apollo at one time or another. Many of the virtually lost foreign films he was instrumental in having re-issued (I think of “The Proud and the Beautiful”) had played there in second run, as with the Thalia on 95th Street which the Apollo most closely resembled.

Almost every foreign film that had opened elsewhere in New York played there, regardless of previous performance or subject matter. Some, like Germi’s “Un maledetto imbroglio” (“The Facts of Murder”), Rossi’s “Amici per la pelle” (“The Woman in the Painting”) and the omnibus film “The Witches,” with episodes by Pasolini, De Sica and others, actually premiered here and were reviewed by the New York Times after their Apollo opening. They showed many minor shelved films that could not even get into the major houses and that their distributors wanted to realize some revenue from before issuing to the non-theatrical 16mm market.

From “Devil in the Flesh” to “The Divided Heart”, across the spectrum of subject matter, the Apollo was one of America’s greatest, if not the THE greatest, showcases for international cinema! To have seen everything they showed would be to be cinematically enriched beyond measure.

sasheegm
sasheegm on May 30, 2005 at 12:28 am

Since I moved from Brooklyn to Long Island in 1959, and had not gone to the Apollo after that time period, I can only say what I rememberd…….Outstanding Foreign Films with substance by Directors such as DeSica, Rossellini, Gance, Eisenstein….and actors we did not normally see on Tv or the neighborhood Theaters, Like Girotti, Vallone, Manfreddi, DelRio, Armendariz, Cervi, Trenker, Albers, Servais, and Gabin———In fact, I saw Rififi there for the first time on a double bill for about 35 cents…….So for the time period I attended the Apollo, it was a showplace for many Foreign Countries Greatest Directors and performers…….Yes there was Nudity in some, and sexuality in some; but it was neccesary for the plot-outline——It was not to titilate or exploit…….and those films gave me a greater appreciation of the different Cultures in other Countries…..especially the Italian films, which so often portrayed historical events, and the neo-realism that was part of Italy after WW2……Bravo to the owners of the Apollo of that time frame, for all the enjoyable hours I spent, learning the art of film-making at its best——BTW; I believe Martin Scorsese also went there around the same time as we did Gerry……Joe From Florida…..sasheegm

Gerald A. DeLuca
Gerald A. DeLuca on May 29, 2005 at 11:59 pm

The Apollo also showed many imported genre films, from policiers to British comedies, to adventure films, to human dramas of various kinds. And while they certainly did not shy away from saucier imports, they also showed many films that had no such “sexploitable” angles.

Mike (saps)
Mike (saps) on May 29, 2005 at 11:18 pm

Many early foreign films tackled subjects and depicted things that weren’t possible in Hollywood movies. And it was a natural progession that many “art” theatres devolved from racy foreign films to soft core domestic nudist films and slowly but surely to hard core; there are many examples of this across the nation, including the Cameo and Tivoli in New York and the Park in Champaign, Ill., to name just a few. But when the hard core market exploded, it wasn’t at the Apollo, which eventually swiched to mainstream shows.

Al Alvarez
Al Alvarez on May 29, 2005 at 10:08 pm

Let’s not fool ourselves. The Apollo took the best of the then current crop of foreign of European film and turned them into sexploitation material. They did not revive films unless they had sex value.

I am not devualing the Apollo. I love sexploitation. But let’s not play stupid history games. The Apollo was the grandad of porn.

JoeS
JoeS on May 8, 2005 at 3:26 am

Hi Joe, I just wrote you.Again thanks for the great memories.I'm
pretty certain our paths must have crossed in life.

sasheegm
sasheegm on May 8, 2005 at 1:53 am

JoeS: Go to your website and read my message, Paisan!—-have to shut down for a while because of my damn disability—-Nerve damage to my spinal chord—-cannot sit or stand too long——One reason it took so long to respond to you…Ciao, Joe From Florida—-sasheegm—-P.S. Sashee is our cat, gm is short for Gramps and Grandma—-my wife and I——Grandkids picked out the weird moniker 4 years ago, when they got me off of the sofa——

JoeS
JoeS on May 7, 2005 at 11:37 pm

Thanks Bryan, I couldn’t find it.Tried doing vaarious searches on
here and figured I’d ask.

JoeS
JoeS on May 7, 2005 at 10:40 pm

Joe from Florida you seem to have the same memories I have.I
remember the Laff Movie house.I wonder why it hasn’t been placed on
Cinema Treasures?I haven’t found anything on it so far except for
this post.’ve been trying to research the internet for any item,
but none found at this time.By the way I won a prize at the old
Willoughby Theater as a kid.It was chinese checkers.They had a
race with midget cars and I had a winning ticket.I also come
from your neighborhood and you can visit my site if you’d like.
http://www.phototouch.net – Good old days.

sasheegm
sasheegm on April 21, 2005 at 11:50 pm

I took many dates to the Apollo and introduced then to Italian films……Even WOR-TV in NY could not stop me from going there when they showed Italian movies once a week—-in the 1950s——Sponsor was Hormel Meats……The Willoughby Movie House in my old neighborhood of Brooklyn showed Italian films, and all I had to do was walk 3 blocks to the Wagner to see German films…..Now I collect them on dvd and video—-A mutual friend, Brian Simmons told me to contact you last September, but Hurricane Frances demolished my house, and it took 5 months for me to get back in——Hope to talk to more about Italian Cinema Gerry—-Great to hear from you….Joe From Florida—-sasheegm—–

Gerald A. DeLuca
Gerald A. DeLuca on April 21, 2005 at 9:59 pm

Joe, I agree with your enthusiasm for the Apollo in its heyday. They aften got foreign films that were shelved, barely distributed, etc., in addition to major releases. In short, they had fascinating never-know-what-to-expect programming. (See my posting above, the very first on this page!) I read somewhere that the Apollo got a lot of patronage from deaf or hearing-impaired persons, because they almost always showed foreign language films with subtitles, enabling non-hearers to follow the dialog.

sasheegm
sasheegm on April 21, 2005 at 9:31 pm

I started going to the Apollo in the mid 50s to enjoy Foreign films…….It was a big theater compared to those in my Brooklyn neighborhood; but then every Move House on 42nd st. was a fairly good size………Some of the films i saw if my memory serves me right were, Abel Gance’s “Lucrezia Borgia” from 1934, Martine Carol’s re-make of Lucrezia Borgia….and many Italian films such as Cronaca Di Una Amore with Lucia Bose', Jolanda La Figlia del Corsaro Nero among others…..What a block that was……Each Movie House showed different variety or Genre of films….The Laff-Movie House with many Vintage shorts, the one House on the Corner of 8th Ave and 42nd st that showed ‘Cult" trash films……Then the late 60s came & all of the sleaze…….I have many fond memories of enjoying Movies on that row of Theaters, but my favorite there was the Apollo………If I recall in the mid-50s, you could get in for $35 cents……Joe From Florida sasheegm

42ndStreetMemories
42ndStreetMemories on April 17, 2005 at 5:31 pm

Here is a 1966 shot of the The Deuce. Note the billboard over the Apollo…..HOME OF DISTINGUISHED FOREIGN FILMS. 55 CENTS WEEKDAYS….8AM TO ????

I won the item on ebay and will be loaded it on to my website soon. Here’s the temporary link:
View link

For those interested, the films partially obscured are:
HARPER & SWINGER’S PARADISE (Lyric), OUT OF THE PAST & TENSION AT TABLE ROCK (Times Square), TROUBLE WITH ANGELS & MYSTERY OF THUG ISLAND (Selwyn), WEEKEND AT DUNKIRK & THAT MAN IN ISTANBUL (New Amsterdam); Apollo appears to have a Gina Lollobrigida film.

42ndStreetMemories
42ndStreetMemories on February 26, 2005 at 6:06 pm

Great shot of the Apollo, TImes Square & Lyric around 1950 can be seen here:

View link

42ndStreetMemories
42ndStreetMemories on February 26, 2005 at 5:33 pm

I just found a beautiful color clip of the Apollo and entire north side of 42nd Street from 1956 on the gettyimages.com website. The Selwyn is showing (3 Coins in the Fountain & Love is a Many Splendid Thing), Apollo (Naked Night & Divided Heart – Note the marquee reads NOT FOR THE JUNIORS, an omen of what was to come), Times Square (Best of the Badmen & Badman’s Territory), Lyric (Man in the Grey Flannel Suit & Magnificent Roughnecks), Victory (Purple Heart & Guadalcanal Diary). Here’s the link View link

Jerry 42nd Street Memories

jays
jays on January 6, 2005 at 12:14 am

If i’m not mistaken I think as the Academy theatre the Apolla used to be the venue H.B.O. used to tape “Russell Simmons Def Comedy Jam” with Martin Lawrence. I was in attendence during one taping the theatre looked much smaller than it did on television but I remember that domed ceiling and all the mouldings in the auditorium. When they tape when you are in the audience unless you are a V.I.P. you sat in the balcony section. Members of the production team, friends and family of either Russel Simmons, the comics that appeared on stage or Martin Lawrence, as well as the D.J. were seated in the orchestra section.