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Mary Anderson Theatre

Louisville, KY
612 S. 4th Street
, Louisville, KY 40202 United States
(map)
Status: Closed
Screens: Single Screen
Style: Unknown
Function: Office Space
Seats: 1405
Chain: Unknown
Architect: William J. Dodd
Firm: Unknown
Add a photo for this theater!
The Mary Anderson was the oldest theatre on Louisville's Fourth Street. Originally opened as a vaudeville house, it was converted to film sometime in the 1920s. The theatre closed in the early 1970s and has been converted into office space. The theatre was named for actress Mary Anderson who made her stage debut in this city.
Contributed by Charles Zoeller


YOUR COMMENTS

 
This is a postcard picture of the Mary Anderson Theater building.

posted by Lost Memory on Jun 28, 2006 at 1:15am
There was also a Mary Anderson who invented the windshield wiper for automobiles. I wonder if they were in any way related?
posted by Warren G. Harris on Jun 29, 2006 at 4:54am
The Mary Anderson that invented the windshield wiper is not the Mary Anderson that this theater was named after. I found three "famous" women named Mary Anderson. One did invent the windshield wiper and received a patent in 1903. The next Mary Anderson (aka Bebe Anderson) was a movie and tv actress. The third Mary Anderson (aka Mary de Navarro) was a stage actress and probably the woman that this theater was named after. Her first appearance on stage was at a theater in Louisville, Kentucky in the role of Shakespeare's Juliet.

posted by Lost Memory on Jun 29, 2006 at 5:57am
So I am assuming that the theater is named after the third MA, not the second?
posted by Rick Aubrey on Jun 29, 2006 at 12:05pm
Yes, it was the third mentioned Mary Anderson (aka Mary de Navarro). The second mentioned film and TV actress didn't arrive on the scene until the 1940s and never achieved full stardom.
posted by Warren G. Harris on Jun 29, 2006 at 1:21pm
There is also a Mary Anderson center for the arts located in Mount St. Francis Indiana. The center is named in honor of Mary Anderson the stage actress. A small photo of Mary Anderson can be viewed at the centers website. http://www.maryandersoncenter.org/about.htm
posted by mikemovies on Jun 29, 2006 at 4:09pm
Sad story. The Mary Anderson was a wonderful downtown theater of the era. It had one of those star-studded ceilings with revolving clouds.

The Mary Anderson's fate paralleled that of Fourth Street. In the early 60s, the balcony was closed off and turned into The Penthouse Theater. 'Cleopatra' showed at the Penthouse. That, of course, was the end of the great Mary Anderson ceiling.

Louisville saved the Brown Theater but not the Mary Anderson. RIP.

Like other people, I assumed that the theater was named for the second-rate actress with small parts in "Gone With the Wind" and "Lifeboat." But it was the older stage actress who had a Louisville connection. It would be interesting to know how the theater came to be named for her.
posted by marty johnson on Sep 2, 2006 at 11:36am
Sad story. The Mary Anderson was a wonderful downtown theater of the era. It had one of those star-studded ceilings with revolving clouds, and a fine old ornate lobby with staircase, urns, and the rest.

The Mary Anderson's fate paralleled that of Fourth Street, with various attempts to salvage it that in fact promoted its decline. In the early 60s, the balcony was closed off and turned into The Penthouse Theater. 'Cleopatra' showed at the Penthouse. That, of course, was the end of the Mary Anderson's ceiling.

Louisville saved the Brown Theater but not the Mary Anderson. RIP.

Like other people, I assumed that the theater was named for the second-rate actress with small parts in "Gone With the Wind" and "Lifeboat." But it was the older stage actress who had a Louisville connection. It would be interesting to know how the theater came to be named for her.
posted by marty johnson on Sep 2, 2006 at 11:38am
Marty, I believe that you have this theatre confused with what was once the Loew's-United Artists, an atmospheric designed by John Eberson. To the best of my knowledge, the Mary Anderson was a conventional playhouse that did not have revolving clouds and/or a star-studded ceiling.
posted by Warren G. Harris on Sep 2, 2006 at 12:23pm
Opus 9 a 2 Manual/4 Rank WurliTzer Theatre Pipe Organ was shipped to this theatre in 1912. Sometime later it was removed and ended up in New York, New York, but nothing else is known about what happrned to it.
posted by Ret. AKC(NAC) Bob Jensen on Oct 27, 2006 at 6:33am
Marty is confusing the Mary Anderson with the United Artists/Loewe's/Penthouse. The Mary Anderson was across the street, next to the Rialto. It was not terribly well suited to be a movie theater. It wasn't very wide and the projection booth was in the upper stratosphere so that the image on the screen was noticeably distorted. It looked like the screen was tilted backwards. The most interesting aspect of the theater was for a time the management thought it would cute to have "usherettes" who would dress in costume, depending upon the movie shown. For example, when they showed "Cactus Flower" the usherettes were dressed as nurses. Some of the other films shown there I can recall are Barbarella and Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. Eventually it became a church. I understand it has been completely converted to office space now.
posted by Scottoro on Nov 16, 2006 at 7:17am
Designed by noted Louisville-based architect William J. Dodd.
posted by kamiel on Apr 17, 2007 at 2:29pm
I am looking for a Rapp & Rapp designed theatre in Louisville from around 1915. An article heralding the completion of the Palace Theatre in Rockford in February of 1915 says that the Rapps had a theatre under construction in Louisville at the time? Any know which one it might have been?
posted by Paul W on May 15, 2007 at 5:01pm
I remember seeing "Cleopatra" in the upstairs "Penthouse" at the United Artists (now Palace) Theatre. What a theatre street 4th Street was back in the 60s!
posted by moviejs on Jun 5, 2007 at 6:31am
At any rate just remember that this theater was named after Mary Anderson, the stage actress from the Louisville area. Is the Mary Anderson Theater Building now called the Mary Anderson Office Building? If it's not it seems like it should be! Pehaps a movement should be started for that to happen. Is a plaque on the building to commemorate the theater?

Anyone know what happened to that Mighty WurliTzer Theater Pipe Organ when it went to New York, New York? If you know anything about the organ, please email us!

"Gee Dad, it "WAS" a WurliTzer!"
posted by Ret. AKC(NAC) Bob Jensen on Feb 17, 2008 at 6:36am
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