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Yale Theater

Houston, TX
3811 Washington Avenue
, Houston, TX 77007 United States
(map)
Status: Closed/Demolished
Screens: Single Screen
Style: Art Moderne
Function: Unknown
Seats: 1204
Chain: Unknown
Architect: Unknown
Firm: Unknown
Add a photo for this theater!
The Yale Theater opened in 1938. It was built by the Interstate Theater chain of Dallas. At the time it opened, admissions were 5 cents, 10 cents and 25 cents.

On Saturday mornings there would be three hours of cartoons, serials, a feature film and frequently a stage show. The Yale Theater was demolished in the mid-Sixties and replaced by a bank.
Contributed by Lost Memory


YOUR COMMENTS

 
Seating was 1204. I found two numbered addresses for this theater so I entered neither of them. One is 3811 Washington Ave and the other is 3906 Washington Ave. Does anyone know if either of these is correct?
posted by Lost Memory on Mar 1, 2005 at 7:40pm
By the mid 1950's the Yale and the Broadway were operated by (I believe) Rowley United or some other chain out of Dallas. I believe Interstate had to give up those two theaters in 49' or 50' as part of the Paramount decree. A gentleman by the name of Guggenheimer (mispelled) was the city manager and worked out of the Yale. I remember BEN-HUR played both theaters after it played it's exclusive 70mm reserved seat run at the Tower in 1960. By that time, the Yale had seen its better days.
Does anyone have any information on the Garden Oaks, Alameda, Santa Rosa or Bellaire in the Houston area?
posted by eadkins on Mar 2, 2005 at 3:25pm
There is an entry on the Bellaire (http://cinematreasures.org/theater/9910/). It's not a tremendous amount of information, just what I could remember and scrounge on the web, since I haven't lived in Houston for a quarter of a century.
posted by Caro on Mar 2, 2005 at 5:04pm
A photo of the Yale theater in Houston can be seen here:
http://www.moviepalaces.net/yale.jpg
posted by Lost Memory on Mar 17, 2005 at 10:04am
Some of my most vivid and happy childhood memories revolve around this old theater located at the entrance to the Heights section of Houston.
I think the first time I went there was in 1959 with my two older brothers and continued going there with them until the start of the Viet Nam war when they both got drafted and I began going alone.
The first movies I actually remember seeing there were the Elvis movies which were followed by the Surfer movies and the Horror movies and then the Hells Angels on Wheels type movies following later. The last movie I remember seeing there was the original showing of Bonnie and Clyde with Warren Beaty and Faye Dunnaway
..a true first run at that time.
I learned to twist at the Yale as Mr. Bodenhiemer (not Gugenhiemer), the manager, actually had a twist contest during the intermissions during the Saturday matinees programs (which consited of a cartoon, a re-run and then the main feature). Yes, Mr. Bodenhiemer would jump up on the stage there in front of the screen on Saturdays and thank us all for showing up and then go into his famous "I'll give two movie passes for anyone who is wearing one red sock and one blue sock!!" And sure enough there would be a winner!! Then he would say "Alright Boys and Girls who can do the twist?" Come on up here and we will have a twist contest and the winner will get five movie passes and a free popcorn and soda from the conssecion stand!!" Man it was the cats meow and the most hillarious thing I ever saw to see a line of 8 to 14 year olds up on that stage doing the twist to the old Chubby Checkers song...and I too even went up to try to win at the urgings of a girl I had met there that day. What fun those intermission activities use to be. Eventually Mr. Bodenhiemr even let area garage bands up on the stage to play two or three songs and Louie Louie and Wild Thing and Wooly Bully never sounded so good as being played by kids with out of tune guitars and missed drum licks..but you couldn't tell as the kids were wild.
Eventually the lights Mr. Bodenhiemer would remind us how great we all were and that it was time for the next show and that good behaviour was the best way to stay for the next show...what fun we had at that theater. I learned to sing like Elvis, dance like I was at the Beach with Annette Funnichello, and kick like Billy Jack and ride my bicycle like I was a Hells Angel Unchained!! Yes the Yale theater was a classic and God Bless Mr. Bodenhiemer and his crew for allowing us kids to have such a good time on Saturday.
posted by swampsterman on Dec 14, 2005 at 5:44am
The Bellaire was renamed the Bel-Air, & included a bar. It closed & has been the Discovery Zone.
The Garden Oaks is still standing & may be the closest to its original form. It is a Latino church now.
posted by rogerscorpion on Jul 31, 2006 at 11:23pm
eadkins--what Paramount decree?
posted by rogerscorpion on Jul 31, 2006 at 11:24pm
In February 1949, Paramount Pictures Corporation along with MGM, RKO,Warner Bros. and 20th Century-Fox entered into a divorcement decree with the Justice Department of the United States. It was called the Paramount Consent Decree.
Paramount would be protected by it's consent decree, but the terms were severe & specific. In addition to total separation of the studio from all domestic theaters, the Justice Department restricted the spin-off exhibition company to a maximum of 600 theaters. The Paramount circuit was then 1450 strong, of which over 1000 were still partially owned Paramount affiliates. Interstate Circuit Inc. of Texas was one of those affiliates. So Paramount decided to negotiate leeway to be able to acquire the controlling interests in several of it's affiliates, while selling off its less desirable theaters. The Justice Department stipulated so long as Paramount created a free market with no local Paramount monopoly. Paramount still had an interest in Interstate after the decree and because of that, Interstate couldn't expand without closing or selling a current theater.
posted by ennis on Aug 1, 2006 at 9:43am
Thanks.
I just found out that the church group which owns the Garden Oaks is restoring it, to use as a performing arts & community guidance center.
posted by rogerscorpion on Aug 1, 2006 at 10:48pm
That's great news. I'll have to visit it when it's completed.
posted by ennis on Aug 2, 2006 at 5:28am
Photos of the Yale Theater can be seen here.

posted by Lost Memory on Jul 28, 2008 at 3:55pm
Thank you for posting the site for photos of the Yale Theater in Houston. It brought back fond memories!
posted by yalegirl on Jul 30, 2008 at 7:47pm
Here's my comment to Swampsterman. I worked at the Yale Theater from 1959 to 1961 behind the candy counter. The man who ran the theater was Alvin Guggenheim. My father rented some property from him and was good friends with him and he was my boss. He was a really great man and he loved the teenagers. Saturdays were great at Yale Theater. I loved living there and I am a native Houstonian and a Native Texas. I went to George Washington Jr. High and then I went to Reagan and San Jacinto High Schools. I love remembering the old and the good times.
posted by Patti Westberg on Oct 27, 2008 at 9:36am
The Yale Theater's grand opening was at 7:30 p.m. on May 20, 1938. The Yale was originally managed by John Arnold. The premier feature was “Navy Blue and Gold” with Robert Young and James Stewart. The Yale’s sound system was Western Electric wide range sound.
posted by Bob Machann on Sep 23, 2009 at 4:54pm
The address should be 3811 Washington Ave. at Yale.
posted by Chuck1231 on Jan 28, 2010 at 10:53pm
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