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  Discover. Preserve. Protect.

Capitol Theatre

New London, CT
43 Bank Street
, New London, CT 06320 United States
(map)
Status: Closed
Screens: Single Screen
Style: Unknown
Function: Unknown
Seats: 1730
Chain: Unknown
Architect: W.H. Lane
Firm: Unknown
Capitol Theatre
Recent exterior view of the Capitol Theatre
Photo courtesy of Roger Katz
The Capitol has long been abandoned.

The theater lobby can still be seen through the glass doors and still has the ticket booth intact.

Since it has not been used since the cinema closed many years ago, the auditorium may still be intact.
Contributed by Roger Katz


YOUR COMMENTS

 
The Capitol Theatre is located at 43 Bank Street and it seated 1730 people.
posted by William on Nov 19, 2003 at 4:16pm
This theatre was shut down for code violations in the mid-70's and has not been used since. Photos of the interior are at http://www.mainstreet.org/BuildingOpportunities/MorePictures.asp?ID=98%20 .
posted by Roger Katz on Jan 29, 2004 at 8:11pm
The Capitol first opened in November, 1921, and had W.H. Lane as architect.
posted by Warren G. Harris on Apr 7, 2004 at 1:38pm
Wow this place looks like it could still be restored. What is the neighborhood like?
posted by RobertR on Apr 7, 2004 at 1:45pm
Robert, it has been abandoned for nearly 30 years, so restoration would cost many millions of dollars. Also, the problem would be in finding a niche for it. To use as a cinema it would have to be carved up as one large auditorium is not feasible these days. It could not make it as a performing arts center because the renovated Garde Theatre a couple of blocks away has already fulfilled that need in downtown New London. Also, some genius decided to build directly behind the theatre's stage area leaving no room to expand the stage which is too small for modern productions.
posted by Roger Katz on Apr 7, 2004 at 5:30pm
I fell in love with this theater last week while roaming around New London waiting for the ferry.

Two huge issues: 1. It is a designated landmark so it needs to be restored, not just renovated; and 2. Any major construction will require asbestos abatement, which could double the construction costs of the project.

We could look to the Times Square Rehabilitation project in NYC to see what was done with those old theaters, but unless there's a niche for a B.B. King's House of Blues in New London, I fear that the Capitol requires too much capital.
posted by MaryNYC on Jul 2, 2004 at 10:00am
"asbestos abatement" causes one to pause and I just wonder how much of this exists in restoring and/or renovating old theatres of yester-year!?!
posted by Patsy on Jun 8, 2005 at 10:18am
Couldn't The Capitol be restored and used as a vaudeville museum? They could have performances associated with the museum and a theater school for local children. Wouldn't there be grant money available for such a purpose? The public could come and tour the museum and see a vaudeville show. And children could take classes and perform in an historic theater. I would love to see something like that done with The Capitol.
posted by SKubli on Jul 17, 2005 at 7:00am
That would be such a nice idea.
Is this the theater with the best acoustics or is that the Garde?
posted by Spike Spiegel on Jan 31, 2006 at 5:47pm
The organ from this theatre is now in the Jane Pickens Theatre in Newport, RI, where I was House Organist for 10 years.
posted by BCNett on Feb 15, 2006 at 4:36pm
This is reputed to be the place George Burns met Gracie Allen while they performed Vaudeville. New plans have surfaced for restoration as a performing Rock and Roll theater in the last month.
posted by capitolfan on Feb 18, 2006 at 5:38am
Does anyone know who owns the theatre?

Who is behind the R&R restoration?

I'd like to get in touch.

Its a beautiful theatre and it would be great to see it serving the community once again.
posted by DonVT on Feb 21, 2006 at 4:39am
The National Trust Website says that it seated 2,500 and that it was Neo-Classical. She has some water damage too. I googled Capitol Theatre New London and I found one picture of the inside, I saw something that looked like balconies, it looks like she needs a lot of work.
posted by Spike Spiegel on Mar 18, 2006 at 6:32am
I saw on Channel 3 that it is going to be renovated. Yay!
posted by Spike Spiegel on May 4, 2006 at 3:35pm
This page at the web site of the National Trust for Historic Preservation has an article from 2002 which features a picture showing the water damage in the auditorium of the Capitol Theatre.
posted by Joe Vogel on May 4, 2006 at 5:19pm
It is supposedly going to reopen as a 1500 seat live concert venue in 2008.
posted by Roger Katz on May 5, 2006 at 12:47am
Vacant since 1974, the vaudeville venue-turned-movie theater was sold by the City of New London in July to Plainfield, N.J.-based Maxim Development Group LLC. Maxim principals Salvatore Carfaro Jr. and Patrick Gawrysiak plan a two-year, $2.5 million renovation of the building into a live-music venue. Renovation has begun with restoration of the facade.

No other details or schedule have been released.

The page mentioned above by Joe Vogel, http://www.nationaltrust.org/magazine/archives/arch_story/080202.htm., has a good picture of its exterior as well as the interior, and good background information.

Shalom, ciao, and excelsior


posted by 'Tonino on Sep 28, 2006 at 5:36pm
The Theater is now getting new windows that were specially designed for the theater. The first phases of the face lift are will be completed by the end of the year. The theater will feature probably less than 1500 seats, recording studios, internet studios (for videos , concert feeds etc...) and could become the focal point of Bank Street.

Evan
www.onemilliondollarsforpreservation.com
posted by Evan06 on Oct 13, 2006 at 2:38am
I can't wait to see this one when it reopens!
posted by Roger Katz on Dec 8, 2006 at 5:36pm
I look forward to seeing it as well.

But the developer has already missed a number of deadlines promised in negotiations and agreements with the cityfor the $2.5M renoavation. Missed dates include start demolition of the interior, remediation of the asbestos within 30 days of transfer, and the purchase of the windows mentioned above by Evan. It was sold for $1 plus tax abatements. See <<http://www.theday.com/re.aspx?re=146bb48a-3d39-40b7-aaa1-b5acf0fa9814>> for more details. The article includes a picture of its very ornate boxes, walls, and ceilings.

Shalom, ciao, and excelsior


posted by 'Tonino on Dec 11, 2006 at 4:48am
Some 30 odd years ago I toured the interior of the Ca[ital with the dream of creating what the Garde has become. It would have made a better choice of venue. However even then the restoratiom costs would have been signifacantly more then the Garde.
When I toured the building there was significant water damage from a leaky roof. Plaster damage on one wall was evident.
All the deats on the main level would need to be replaced, but the balcony was in great shape. The balcony had not been in use for years before the place closed. The "private" boxes on the balcony level had no seats.
The projection booth still had its equipment. There were even spools of adult films there. The lobby concession still had popcorn in them.
The decor of the building outshines the Garde. In its day it was a jewel among theaters. Restoration today would run in the millions. Heatin, ac plumbing, electric service, sound, lighting, new seating God knows what else would make it almost impossible. I hope I'm wrong I would love to see it restored. Maybe someone could convince the Pequots that it would be a good idea.
posted by rlevin on Sep 22, 2007 at 9:09pm
Beautiful facade.
posted by Ian -'adoraKiaOra on Sep 23, 2007 at 4:01am
A Marr & Colton theater organ size 2/8 was installed in the Capitol Theater in 1926.

posted by Lost Memory on Sep 26, 2007 at 7:35pm
That organ, now in the Jane Pickens Theatre in Newport, is the only one remaining in a theatre with a Symphonic Registrator (40 combinations labelled by the mood they are intended to accompany in a silent movie, such as Love, Mysterious, Children, etc. It works wonderfully when accompanying a picture.

That organ is now unplayable, but the new theatre owner is interested in having it restored.
posted by BCNett on Oct 3, 2007 at 3:43pm
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