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Woodland Theatre

Nashville, TN
1011 Woodland Street
, Nashville, TN 37206 United States
(map)
Status: Closed
Screens: Single Screen
Style: Unknown
Function: Recording Studio
Seats: 500
Chain: Unknown
Architect: Unknown
Firm: Marr & Holman
Add a photo for this theater!
The earliest listing I've found for this theatre is in the 1924 Polk Nashville City Directory. I was told that the theatre was designed by the Nashville architecture firm of Marr & Holman. It is currently used as a recording studio.
Contributed by Jack Coursey


YOUR COMMENTS

 
A 2005 photo of the original entrance to the theatre from Woodland Street can be viewed at http://www.flickr.com/photos/maincourse/22960067/ There is a photograph on file at the main branch of the Nashville Public Library of the Woodland when it was still a theatre and before these unsightly additions were made to the façade.
posted by JackCoursey on Jul 1, 2005 at 6:07pm
The Tennessee State Library and Archives has two great vintage pictures of this theater. The photographs aren't dated, but they must be pretty early; notice the ancient car and the streetcar tracks:

http://tnsos.org/tsla/imagesearch/images/3785.jpg

http://tnsos.org/tsla/imagesearch/images/3786.jpg
posted by Thanner on Mar 17, 2008 at 7:50am
Nice pictures of the Woodland I grew up near there and it closed as a theater before I was born and I am not that young my dad would tell me about it because he was born on Woodland street.
posted by tlsloews on Nov 3, 2009 at 4:25pm
Jack: I can find plenty of references to the firm of Marr & Holman, formed in 1913, but I've been unable to find anything about an architect named Arch who was ever associated with the firm. Could somebody have been using "Arch" as an abbreviation of Architects?

It's certainly possible that Marr & Holman designed the Woodland, as they were among Nashville's busiest architects during the 1920s, and theaters were one of their specialties.

Beginning in the 1920s, they had a long-running contract with the Crescent Amusement Company to design all the circuit's theaters in the Nashville region. The Woodland was definitely part of the Crescent circuit by the 1940s, and it it was built for Crescent, then it was almost a certainly a Marr & Holman design.

Here is a PDF of the nomination form seeking the addition of a number of Marr & Holman works to the National Register of Historic Places. Though it has little information about their theaters (none of which were among the buildings being nominated), it does say they designed 61 theaters over the fifty-year history of the firm, and spcifically names the Princess Theatres at Bowling Green and Murphreesboro, Tennessee, as being among them.
posted by Joe Vogel on Nov 4, 2009 at 12:06am
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