Comments from vokoban

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vokoban
vokoban commented about Regent Theatre on Mar 6, 2008 at 8:26 am

I don’t think the Banner and Regent were the same. There are too many articles naming them separately in the same time period. Plus, the Banner was there earlier. The Regent was operating at the time of the 1955 article. Here are a few from the Banner page:

(Jan 1, 1937)
Harry E. Ransome, who opertated the Banner Theater at Fifth and Main streets up to 1913, asserted that Los Angeles had grown so that if he had been dropped somewhere without anybody to show him around that he would have become lost.

(March 27, 1955)
Workmen uncovered the relic when a new front was constructed on the Banner Building in 1952. The machine (1 ½ ton music box organ) was in sad condition. Rats had made a home in it, hundreds of feet of rubber tubing had disintegrated, moths had eaten the felt, and the electric motor, colored lights and other parts had vanished.

vokoban
vokoban commented about Paramount Theatre on Feb 27, 2008 at 1:55 pm

Here is a fairly florid LA Times article written a few days after the opening of this theater. It’s pretty long but I’ll post it since it contains a lot of details about the decoration and architecture.

(Jan. 26, 1923)

NEW GRAUMAN A WORLD APART

All Activity From Outside Ends at the Threshold

Masterpiece in Cement is Architect’s Reward

Beauty and Simplicity Are Keynotes of Creation
By Kenneth Taylor

Swing wide the portals, step over the threshold and, as the doors of the new Grauman Metropolitan Theater close softly behind you, find yourself in a world apart.
Nothing about the theater will remind you of the outside world from which you have just come. The light of day never enters the building while it is open to the public. The noises of the street are shut out just as surely as are the sights of hurrying crowds and vehicles. The architecture is of no one style. Here is a bit of the Greek, there is something Egyptian. Ideas have been borrowed from the Romans, from the Chinese. Beauty alone has been the keynote, and beauty alone is the result.
To just what extent this feeling of aloofness from the world has been sought for we found out just a week ago today when a party of men from The Times was shown through the theater. Even the windows are made of black, opaque glass, and shut out every ray of natural sunlight from the beautiful lounging and rest rooms as well as from the auditorium.

NEW LAND IS REVEALED
Here is a new land: a land that invites inspection and excites imagination. Before you rich velvet draperies hide a full view of the stage and auditorium, although glimpses of the great curtain, on which is painted a travesty of H. G. Well’s “Outline of History,” are visible occasionally as the crowds in front move down the aisles.
On each side of the foyer, stairways lead to the mezzanine floor and the balcony. As if guarding the staircases, stand two huge statues in gold. They do not balance but, on the contrary, prove striking contrasts in size and significance. On the right is an allegorical, grotestque image which has an enigma as deep as the sphynx and as undiscoverable. On the left is the Snail-Deer. The graceful neck of a deer is attached to the centrifugal folds of earth’s most slothful traveler, the snail. Symbolic of romance, tenderness, grace, beauty and aspiration, the deer is held from accomplishment by the sluggish, slimy crawl of the snail.
Beauty of painting and building are in evidence everywhere. Gorgeous hanging, highly valued, adorn the walls. Mural paintings by the score are revealed. The mezzanine floor seems a treasure house of beauty. Artistic arches, carved figures, velvety curtains, highly colored paintings all lend, too, a mystic air.

COMPOSITE BEAUTY STRIKING
Overembellished, you say? Perhaps. But let the composite beauties of the house sink in. go out into the auditorium and see the hugeness of the place. And as the eyes hunt out one innovation after another, they will find that this is not an overdecorated theater; it is, perhaps, reminescent of the Stone Age: the structure is primitive in its massive simplicity.
Stand a moment on the very brink of the balcony on the west side of the house. Below on one hand yawns the cavernous mouth of the auditorium: above on the other hand stretches the vast expanse of balcony.
See what a glance around the temple will reveal.
On the left the great proscenium arch, apparently roughly hewn from naked rock, shields the stage, flanked on either side by great stone columns surmounted by grotesque images. Perched on the column at your side is a carving representing Mirth; on the opposite column another representing Tragedy. In the very center of the arch Gabriel occupies a secluded niche of his own. Hanging from the proscenium, as well as from other parts of the ceiling all over the auditorium, are great pendants, oddly shaped and weighing tons.
And now glance across the auditorium to the opposite wall, where hangs a tapestry or two. The gray monotony of the unfinished cement is relieved here and there with niches, some large, some small. Some contain images.

THREE SPHERES
In the first tall niche hangs an object like a totem pole made of an opaque glass, representing three spheres——of the earth, of the air, of the spirit. Colored lights arranged back of this throw the design in silhouette.
The wall across the back of the balcony is also unique. It is arched all the way across, giving the impression of great distance beyond the actual physical limitations of the auditorium. Perhaps it suggests an ancient aqueduct, serving the needs of a primitive civilization. But the effect is not allowed to predominate, for in the center of the wall, closely hugging the ceiling, are the tell-tale, square openings of the projecting room, for all the world, from the distance at which you stand, like a group of pueblo stone dwellings perched high on a mountain side.
Overhead hangs a great circular design, ninety feet in diameter, which covers the greater part of the ceiling. Never mind its technical name: it has been dubbed the “doily” by the men who have watched the theater rise from the ground. And like a great doily it is, with its latticed, golden strips forming a network behind which thousands of different colored incandescent lamps produce varied effects.
And as you look up, beyond the doily, the beams of the room themselves, covered with cement to be in keeping with the rest of the structure, are visible. Here is an example of the courage and originality of William Woollett, the architect. For instead of covering from view the crude looking braces and rafters with a false ceiling, and suspending false beams from that in order to produce the effect of strength and solidity, he has utilized the same beams that the construction engineer used for the actual work of holding up the roof.

CEMENT AGE IS HERE
Inspect closely the construction of the theater. You will be struck with the thought that the cement age is here at last, for everywhere you turn, that material has been used almost exclusively. It is, in fact, a most deceptive theater.
Mr. Woollett had an inspiration. He insisted that he could use cement to the exclusion of practically all other materials and make it look like anything he wished.
As a result, the wonderful stone and marble work inthe lobby is not stone and marble work at all; it is cement. The great stone pillars on either side of the proscenium are not stone: they are cement. The plush cloth covering the bases of these pillars is not plush: the pillars have merely been painted to resemble that texture of cloth.
And the columns on the stage itself? Ah, you think, there at least is something that is cement and looks like it from all over the house. But approach them and discover that once more you have made a mistake, for upon investigation you will find that what looks like cement is not. It is wood. This was done in order that by a very simple, mechanical operation the entire stage is inclosed in a wooden shell, which acts as a sounding board when the orchestra is heard in concert numbers.
For the most part, the cement has been left unfinished. The walls are rough, revealing the grain of the boards used for molds. Edges of the material protrude where it has oozed out between these boards. Not only are the crude edges still left to view, they are emphasized with gold leaf.
And you turn to sum it up. Huge and massive it is. Beautiful, simple——-and finely primitive.

vokoban
vokoban commented about Saban Theatre on Feb 26, 2008 at 4:21 pm

Here is the LA Times article about the grand opening:

(September 20, 1930)
NEW HOUSE OF CINEMA DEDICATED
Civic and Film Notables Attend Gala Opening of Fox Wilshire Theater
Dedication of the Fox Wilshire Theater, newest temple of cinema art, was held last night, with klieg lights flashing, motion-picture stars, the Beverly Hills Chamber of Commerce and other notables in attendance.
The new theater is located on Wilshire Boulevard at Hamilton Drive, and is of modern design throughout, with decorations in varying shades of silver, coral and black-a magnificent edifice.
A throng welcomed the new house, and the type of brilliance usually attending a typical Southern California premiere made the occasion a memorable one.
The event took on a civic aspect with the president of the Beverly Hills Chamber of Commerce and the Mayor lending dignity to the proceedings. The film colony was represented by Leon Errol, Anita Page, Robert Montgomery, John Miljan, Joan Marsh, Jeanette MacDonald, Fay Wray, Racquel Torres and many others. Errol acted as master of ceremonies.
A children’s matinee was held in the afternoon, with Betty Bronson as guest of honor.
The feature picture at the new Fox Wilshire was “Animal Crackers,” starring the Four Marx Brothers. A program of short subjects completed the gala evening.

vokoban
vokoban commented about Saban Theatre on Feb 26, 2008 at 4:11 pm

(September 19, 1930)
FOX WILSHIRE HOUSE TO HAVE GALA OPENING
Leon Errol, stage and screen player, will be master of ceremonies at the gala opening program tonight of the new Fox Wilshire Theater on Wilshire Boulevard at Hamilton Drive, Beverly Hills.
A civic event, the opening of the new house will be under the direction of the Chamber of Commerce of Beverly Hills. Leaders in civic and social life have made reservations, as well as several motion-picture notables.
The program will include the Marx Brothers in “Animal Crackers,” and several short subjects. In the afternoon a children’s opening will be held with Betty Bronson as guest of honor.

vokoban
vokoban commented about Saban Theatre on Feb 26, 2008 at 4:07 pm

(September 19, 1930)
KMPC offers a treat for premiere lovers at 8 tonight—big opening, stars, etc.. at the Fox Wilshire Theater.

vokoban
vokoban commented about Saban Theatre on Feb 26, 2008 at 4:04 pm

(September 17, 1930)
EQUIPMENT AT FOX WILSHIRE HOUSE LAUDED
The faintest note of Harp’s harp will sound clearly in every part of the new Fox Wilshire Theater, when the Marx Brothers' act, “Animal Crackers,” comes to the screen at the gala premiere of the new house Friday evening, according to reports.
This is the promise of sound experts, who, following extensive tests, pronounced the new theater one of the best in point of sound projection and design of auditorium for audience reception.
The auditorium of the new theater, seating 2500 persons, was designed in the shape of a large horn, which begins at the stage and develops outward. The covering on the upholstered chairs is a new material which enhances the carrying of sound waves, it is said.
With motion-picture celebrities participating, the opening program for the new theater will be under the direction of the Beverly Hills Chamber of Commerce.

vokoban
vokoban commented about Saban Theatre on Feb 26, 2008 at 3:57 pm

(September 14, 1930)
FOX WILSHIRE TO OPEN DOORS
Something new in the way of luxurious seating accomodations will be introduced to the picture-going public when the new Fox Wilshire Theater, Wilshire at Hamilton, Beverly Hills, has its gala opening Friday evening.
The opening festivites of the theater are under the sponsorship and direction of the Chamber of Commerce of Beverly Hills, which organization is planning many unusual features.
The opening screen piece will bring the Marx Brothers in “Animal Crackers.” In the afternoon, a children’s premiere, which will be attended by child stars from the studios, will mark the initial showing of “The Break Up,” Alaskan adventure-travel picture, featuring Capt. Jack Robertson and his pal “Scooter."
Scores of reservations for the opening night of the new theater have been received from the Beverly Hills motion-picture colony.

vokoban
vokoban commented about Saban Theatre on Feb 26, 2008 at 3:48 pm

This is from a few weeks before the opening:

(September 7, 1930)
FOX WILSHIRE TO OPEN SOON
“Art is getting on a more solid basis,” according to Jack Shulze, art director of the Fox Studios, whose modern design in interior and furnishing of the new Fox Wilshire Theater, Beverly Hills, is said to establish a new note in theater decoration.
It has only been during the last few years that the modern art has come into general use, and the new Fox Wilshire is said to be the first theater designed completely in the modern motif.
The colors used in the interior of the new theater are coral, black and silver which are varied at will by a new three-way color system of lighting.
One of the interesting departures in design in the new theater, which has its premiere the 19th inst., is its curtain. It opens in three or four phases, as an iris, developing various designs in the opening.

vokoban
vokoban commented about Saban Theatre on Feb 26, 2008 at 2:34 pm

My HTC (Historic Theater Committee) group is having our meeting at this theater on Thursday this week. I’m really excited since they are going to give a rare tour of the theater before the meeting. Hopefully, they will let us take photos. If so, I’ll be posting them soon.

vokoban
vokoban commented about Lido Theatre on Feb 26, 2008 at 2:30 pm

They were supposed to open a Trader Joe’s in that big art deco building on the corner but the idiots in my neighborhood nixed it because they sell alcohol. Yeah….I really see a lot of wino’s standing around the parking lot at Trader Joe’s.

vokoban
vokoban commented about Lido Theatre on Feb 26, 2008 at 2:20 pm

It was in the bofa parking lot on Pico right west of La Cienega. I went to Nick’s for breakfast across the street and showed the picture to one of the regulars and he showed me right where the theater was. He said he used to go there all the time when he was a child.

vokoban
vokoban commented about Paramount Theatre on Feb 26, 2008 at 12:14 pm

Excitement a few days before opening…..

(Jan. 21, 1923)
LOS ANGELES' NEW PLAYHOUSE
Sid Grauman’s Metropolitan Theater
ON FRIDAY evening, the 26th inst., will occur the opening of Sid Grauman’s gorgeous Metropolitan Theater, to which William Lee Woollett, architect, has contributed his genius. Identified with the West beginning in San Francisco, whence come so many of the world’s theatrical celebrities, from David Belasco to David Warfield, Sid Grauman has made himself an international figure as a premiere exhibitor and director of theatrical attractions. Owing to the enormous interest aroused in the event, the opening night will necessarily be more exclusive than is usual in picture presentation. A process of elimination has been imposed upon the director by reason of the overwhelming demands for seats. Though there are possible, reservations for 4400 persons this number is inadequate to accomodate the applications. Mr. Grauman makes announcement of the following plan: Stars, producers, directors and other film celebrities are requested to communicate to the Metropolitan the number of reservations desired on the opening night. It is Mr. Grauman’s intention to make this a gala event. “The Metropolitan Theater is to be the very center of the motion-picture universe,” says Mr. Grauman, “and it is fitting, I think, that arrangements be made for the accommodation of representatives of the industry, even if the general public is forced to wait for the second night, which really is the inauguration of the theater’s career, when the opening program will be repeated.
PROFESSION IS FIRST
” I am asking stars, producers, directors, players, writers and promoters of picture industries to communicate their needs to the boxoffice and make the required reservations. I am asking the public’s co-operation also to buy at the boxoffice and not from speculators. I have done all that I could to keep tickets for the opening night out of the hands of ‘scalpers.’ I hope that my endeavors in the regard will be supported vigorously by the public.“ As a foretaste of what may be expected on the opening night Mr Grauman announces the following uncompleted program:
To begin with, there will be a demonstration outside the big theater. Details of this are all worked out but are not to be made public. The opening number will be "The Star Spangled Banner,” played by a great symphonic orchestra under the direction of Ulderico Marcelli and with Henry Murtagh at the console of the mighty organ. A chorus of 500 voices will be heard. A flag, said to be the largest in the world, will be unfurled at this time and will be the signal for the beginning of a gorgeous patriotic pageant. Then will follow the big orchestral number, the overture to “Tannhauser,” by Richard Wagner. It will be directed by Marcelli and the Pilgrim’s Chorus will be sung by grand choir of 500 voices. Schubert’s “Ave Maria” will be played as a solo number by forty violinists, accompanied by eight expert harpists. Before and after this number will be dancing acts in which a ballet of 200 artists will be employed. Coming direct to the Metropolitan for this engagement are Waring’s Pennsylvanians, the greatest syncopaters this jazz country has thus far produced. They come from a successful New York season. All this and more will be the prelude to the feature picture, Gloria Swanson in “My American Wife.” A supporting cast of brilliance will appear with the star and will include Antonio Moreno and Walter Long.

vokoban
vokoban commented about Paramount Theatre on Feb 26, 2008 at 11:52 am

I guess the organ cost $1 per pound. This is the beginning of an excruciatingly detailed and long article about the organ:

(Jan. 21, 1923)
ORGAN IS LARGEST OF KIND
Complicated Instrument Installed in Metropolitan Theater
One hundred thousand dollars for a musical instrument! A stupendous apparatus of a multitudinous number of small parts correctly assembled! That is the new Hope-Jones unit orchestra Wurlitzer organ that is now installed in Grauman’s Metropolitan Theater, the largest instrument of its type in the world. This intstrument was built under the direction of James H. Nuttlall, world-famous builder of fine organs, and the man who was most closely associated with the manufacturer, Hope-Jones. In showing the writer through the organ and explaining the many parts and novel features, Mr. Nuttall said that the instrument is in many ways like the human body. “As the brain is the center of distribution for the body and connecting impulse with the various organs is conveyed through the spinal column with fine nerves, so the console or keyboard is the distributing end of the instrument and the impulse of the various parts of the mechanism is conveyed through a cable on insulated wires. This cable may be ten feet or two miles in length and instantaneous response can be obtained from the console. "The total weight of the instrument is 100,000 pounds,” Mr. Nuttall said. “The space necessary to contain the instrument consists of ten independent chambers, each measuring twenty feet long and eleven feet wide…………….

vokoban
vokoban commented about Paramount Theatre on Feb 26, 2008 at 11:28 am

Here is the article that goes with the graphics above:

(May 22, 1921)
PLAN INTERIOR OF PLAYHOUSE.
Local Architect Designing Hill-Street Theater.


Oriental Decorations Will be Principal Motive.

Expect to Complete Structure by January First.

Under the supervision of Architect William Lee Woollett, plans have practically been completed for the interior of the big theater which will form a part of the twelve-story building now under construction at the northeast corner of Sixth and Hill streets by the Hill Street Fireproof Building Company, Mr. Woollett, as the architect of the theater, which will be known as Grauman’s Metropolitan Theater, will have charge of the interior decoration, of the paintings and murals, hangings, furniture and electric fixtures, all of which will be designed and installed under his supervision. Mr. Woollett was the designer of the interior of Grauman’s Million Dollar Theater at Third and Broadway. In coloring and motive the architecture of the theater will be derived principally from the architecture of Egypt and the Orient. The lobby entrance, from the Sixth-street side of the building, will be flanked by massive columns, while the interior of the main lobby, 46 by 59 feet, will be patterned after the rock-cut tombs of Egypt and Arabia. The floors will be constructed of hand-made tile, each of which will depict phases of the development of Western America. On each side the main lobby will be flanked by a grand staircase leading to the mezzanine floor, which will command a view of both the main lobby and theater auditorium. The concrete surfaces of the interior of the theater will be partially exposed, but it is planned to treat these surfaces with color and gold ornamentation. The same type of decoration will be carried out in the theater auditorium. The great concrete trusses over the audiorium will be partially exposed, but as in the lobby and mezzanine, these tresses will be richly treated with color. A feature of the proscenium arch will be the great canopy, hanging without visible support. This canopy will be decorated with a composite of oriental and occidental designs. Suspended from the ceiling there will be an immense flat dome, which will be made of perforated plaster, and ornamented richly with embossed bronze and gold designs, with medallions in the center large enough for mural paintings.
THE FOUR HORSEMEN.
The screen will be surmounted with monumental figures of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. The horses, modelled from life, will be made of porcelain, with the colors burned in them. The curtains will be held in especially designed bronze screen frames and will be operated by burnished bronze chains which will move on especially constructed swivels which will make them noiseless. The organ to be installed will be one of the largest and finest in the country, it is claimed. Plans for this organ, which is being especially designed for the theater, will include a disappearing console, which can automatically be raised up into the view of the audience upon demand. The theater will have a seating capacity for 4000 people. More than 400 workmen, it is stated, are now employed on the building, and it is planned to have the structure completed and ready for occupation by January 1 of next year. In the construction of the building, according to Brook Hawkins, chief engineer of the Winter Construction Company, there will be used 5,000,000 pounds of steel, mor than 100,000 sacks of cement, and over 2,000,000 feet of lumber in the falsework. The immense cantilever which will support the balcony will weight 1100 tons.

vokoban
vokoban commented about Paramount Theatre on Feb 26, 2008 at 11:06 am

Here are a few drawings from the newspaper on May 22, 1921. Click on ‘download the large size’ to see the details:

View link

I’ll post the text of the article soon.

vokoban
vokoban commented about Paramount Theatre on Feb 26, 2008 at 10:53 am

A few revealing remarks from the LA Times:

(July 24, 1920)
THEATER PLANS PROGRESS.
Various rumors having circulated that the construction of the Grauman Metropolitan Theater building at Sixth and Hill streets was being purposely delayed, Sid Grauman now comes forward with a denial that such a thing has happened, or is liable to happen. “The evolving of a cinema theater with the conscious aim of making it superior is something that cannot be done over night. I rejected six different sets of plans before finally accepting a scheme of architecture and decoration that satisfied me,” said Mr. Grauman yesterday. “In fact,” he continued, “I don’t mind saying that I’ve changed my mind not once, but several times, regarding various ideas to be incorporated in the Metropolitan. For some time I was ‘on the fence’ regarding the advisability of having an office building above the theater, and of having stores on the ground floor, but finally decided that both ideas are practical and economically advantageous. "In my lifetime, it is hardly possible that I will ever conceive an instituiton that will surpass the Metropolitan. Therefore, it is logical that this theater, representing my life’s ideal to me, should be given tremendous consideration. For a time I felt that an office building would mar the artistic values of the Metropolitan, but a way was pointed out to me by which art and practicality could be easily wedded, and I agreed. My contractors now promise me that I can count on the opening of the Metropolitan by May 1, 1921.” Mr. Grauman added that work will be begun within two weeks on the construction of Grauman’s Hollywood Theater, which he states will probably be opened before the Metropolitan, probably in February. He added that there was also a possibility of his taking over another local theater in the near future, but would not state which house he had been offered.

vokoban
vokoban commented about Carthay Circle Theatre on Feb 23, 2008 at 10:13 am

Yeah, maybe its from the 50’s when Isabel Bonner dropped dead on the stage in her role of a lifetime. See above…

vokoban
vokoban commented about Carthay Circle Theatre on Feb 22, 2008 at 9:33 pm

These are the types of advertisements I have for the Carthay Circle:

View link

They must be from some type of small format magazine from back then.

vokoban
vokoban commented about Carthay Circle Theatre on Feb 22, 2008 at 9:30 pm

I have the ads in frames, but I’ll try to take a photo without a lot of glare if possible. It’s the same thing with Elia Kazan….he pronounced his own name EEL-ya but most people say it differently.

vokoban
vokoban commented about Carthay Circle Theatre on Feb 22, 2008 at 1:38 pm

I have tons of ads from the this theater from the late 20’s and early 30’s and it is always spelled Carthay Circle Theatre. As a general term I use theater when referring to any structure that showed movies but I use ‘theatre’ when using the actual name if that’s how it was advertised.

vokoban
vokoban commented about Lido Theatre on Feb 21, 2008 at 11:15 am

Here’s a photo of the Lido from the new book titled Theatres In Los Angeles by Images of America:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/vokoban/2282083496/

vokoban
vokoban commented about Tower Theatre on Jan 31, 2008 at 10:56 am

I’ve sifted and sifted and haven’t found anything. That doesn’t mean it didn’t happen, of course. However, if it did happen I can understand that it might not be leaked before the event but after the event it would be highly unlikely that there wouldn’t be some mention….somewhere.

vokoban
vokoban commented about Tower Theatre on Jan 30, 2008 at 8:20 am

Nick…..I still haven’t seen proof of the mysterious sneak preview that people talk about at the Tower. My bet still goes with the Fox Criterion for the Jazz Singer award. If there was a sneak preview at the Tower there should be at least one tiny printed piece of evidence stating the date, but so far its only talk. There’s a long discussion on the Criterion page about this. Here’s a few excerpts:

(Feb. 22, 1928)
Only seven more days remain for Al Jolson as “The Jazz Singer” at the Criterion Theater when the Vitaphone production gives way to Richard Barthelmess in “The Patent-Leather Kid.” The final showing of the black-face comedian’s picture will mark the 138th performance, establishing a new record for the Criterion.

Here is the clincher:

(April 29, 1928)
The Metropolitan Theater has booked “The Patent Leather Kid” with Richard Barthelmess in its first downtown showing at popular prices, “Sunrise” with George O'Brien and Janet Gaynor is at the Criterion, and Al Jolson in “The Jazz Singer” comes to the Tower.

vokoban
vokoban commented about Westlake Theatre on Jan 20, 2008 at 10:03 am

Miracles indeed!!! This is fabulous news….thank you neonrocks. At first I was nervous and fearing that it would be gutted like the Linda Lea or split up like Highland Park but after reading the pdf’s I think it will be done right since the Conservancy and the National Register will be involved. Whoever is in charge has a massive job ahead of them. The last time I was in the space it seemed that the floor had been leveled. How are they going to fix that I wonder?

vokoban
vokoban commented about Los Angeles Theatre on Jan 18, 2008 at 11:05 am

It’s always half-past something at the Los Angeles.