Search

Theaters News Links

Advanced search
 

Theater Guide

Now listing 27,650 theaters & 1,598 photos… more
Browse by...
 

Add Your Cinema Treasure!

Add Theater
Add Photo (offline)
Add Theater News
 
 

Recent Comments

Feb 09 Century Downtown… (12)
Feb 09 AMC Rockaway 16 (741)
Feb 09 Loews Cinema… (3)
Feb 09 Winter Gardens… (2)
Feb 09 Bear Tooth… (6)
Feb 09 Capitol Theater (47)
Feb 09 Mann Plant 16… (6)
Feb 09 Wings Twin… (5)
Feb 09 Panorama Theatre (19)
Feb 09 Metro 4 (13)
 
 
 
  Discover. Preserve. Protect.
Also known as Whitney Opera House

Bijou Theatre

Fitchburg, MA
5 Pritchard Street
, Fitchburg, MA 01420 United States
(map)
Status: Closed
Screens: Single Screen
Style: Unknown
Function: Unknown
Seats: 1000
Chain: Unknown
Architect: Unknown
Firm: Unknown
Add a photo for this theater!
An old theatre in the center of the city that was part of the New Whitney Block. The Whitney Opera House opened on October 20, 1880. The opening show was "The Mascot". The auditorium was located on the second floor. Initially it was used for drama, musical comedy, vaudeville and local variety shows. Some major stars who appeared here include: Joseph Jefferson, Maurice Barrymore, John L. Sullivan and Lillian Russell.

It was later renamed the Bijou Theatre.
Contributed by Gerald A. DeLuca


YOUR COMMENTS

 
There is a postcard picture of a Bijou Theater that was located on Main St and Prichard in Fitchburg, MA. I hope its the same Bijou:
http://www.employees.org/~kjones/fitch_main_pritch_bijou.jpg
posted by Lost Memory on May 4, 2005 at 8:49am
Thanks, lostmemory. Here's another old postcard view with the actual entrance visible.
posted by Gerald A. DeLuca on May 4, 2005 at 10:40am
The entrance seems to have been on Prichard Street. So perhaps "Prichard Street" that can be added as the address. Anyone know the exact address?
posted by Gerald A. DeLuca on May 4, 2005 at 10:44am
According to the Old Theatres of Fitchburg website, this theatre opened as Whitney's Opera House in 1880. In 1904 it became the second home of the Bijou, a vaudeville house which also showed some movies before closing in 1916.

This page features a small (unreadable, alas) scan of a 1961 newspaper article about the Bijou, headlined "Old Opera House at Fitchburg is Deserted Ruin", including an interior photo that appears to date from that time. The place had apparently sat empty for 45 years.

Currently, the block on which the Bijou's entrance was located (on Prichard Street just north of Main Street) has one and two digit street numbers. Searching on Google Maps, the address 5 Prichard Street will fetch that corner. From the satellite view, it looks like the building still stands. There's no Google street view, unfortunately.
posted by Joe Vogel on Jun 11, 2008 at 10:10pm
The Whitney Opera House in Fitchburg is listed in the 1897-98 edition of the Julius Cahn Official Theatrical Guide. Unfortunately, there are no street addresses in this Guide. The seating capacity was 1000; John Oldfield was the Mgr. The theater had both gas and electic illumination. The proscenium opening was 26' X 26', and the stage was 28 feet deep. It says that the theater was on the second floor. Newspapers were the Sentinel and the Mail. Hotels for show folk were the Fitchburg, American House, Balmoral, and Temperance. Railroads were the Fitchburg RR and the New Haven RR. The 1897 population of Fitchburg was 28,000 with an area draw of 40,000.
posted by Ron Salters on Jun 12, 2008 at 10:30am
The spelling of the street name is "Prichard", not the more common "Pritchard". Check Google Maps. It can't find "Pritchard" Street, but easily finds "Prichard" Street.
posted by Joe Vogel on Jun 12, 2008 at 8:44pm
Looking at Google today, there is now a street view. It appears the former entrance might still exist, but the auditorium does not appear to be there anymore, but there is no view of anything in the back.
posted by Phantom Screen on Apr 19, 2009 at 10:01pm
From the aerial google view, there is part of the building which looks like it may be a former auditorium - when you look at the facade from the street, it is the left storefront space that leads to it - currently that section is vacant, the middle one has a store and the right hand section has a recessed entrance which appears to just go to a lobby to the upper floors. From the air, it definitely looks like the auditorium still exists, you can see the outline for the stagehouse. According to a link above, the actual street address is 208 main street. The facade was extensively remodeled from the old pictures of the 1800's. The photo from the 1961 newspaper article shows a narrow building with an old civic hall style arched proscenium opening and a pressed tin ceiling. for a "deserted ruin" it looks in fairly good shape - certainly some theatres that have been rescured were in worse shape. Would be interested in seeing what the space was used for since 1961, and iif it is still available for rent.
posted by spectrum on Sep 2, 2009 at 8:59am
Comment
*

Notify me when someone replies to my comment?
Note: Please read our comment policy before posting. Comments which are off-topic, obscene, spam, or personal attacks will be removed. Help us keep the discussion productive!