Movieland
1567 Broadway,
New York,
NY
10036
9 people favorited this theater
Additional Info
Previously operated by: Rank Organisation, Shubert Brothers Theater Company, Universal Chain Theatrical Enterprises Inc.
Architects: Herbert J. Krapp
Styles: French Renaissance
Previous Names: Central Theatre, Columbia Theatre, Gotham Theatre, Holiday Theatre, Odeon Theatre, Forum Theatre, Forum 47th Street
Nearby Theaters
The Central Theatre was built for the Shubert Brothers and opened on September 9, 1918. It was designed by architect Herbert J. Krapp and located at the corner of Broadway and W. 47th Street, across from the Palace Theatre in Times Square. Seating just over 1,100, the Central Theatre was designed in an elegant French Renaissance style, and contained ornate plasterwork, gilded columns, and paintings on the auditorium walls depicting the court of Louis XVI.
Its auditorium was topped by an oval ceiling cove, and imported European chandeliers hung from the ceiling. It contained a balcony, boxes and orchestra pit. However, its proscenium arch wasn’t very wide, and its stage, fairly small compared to most other Broadway stages.
Until 1928, with the exception of one year (1921) when Universal leased the Central Theatre for screening movies, the theatre was a legitimate house. From 1928 until 1932, it showed movies only. In 1932, live shows made a comeback, but within a year, the Central Theatre began to feature burlesque acts. For several months in 1934, the theatre went by the name the Columbia Theatre, however, by mid-1934, movies were back, and so was the name the Central Theatre.
Briefly in 1942, the Central Theatre once again attempted a return to “all-girl revues”, but very quickly returned to second-run films. It was renamed the Gotham Theatre in 1944, and the theatre remained a movie house until it was closed in 1951 and remodeled inside. It reopened as the Holiday Theatre, and offered live stage revues, which lasted until February 1956, when legitimate theatre briefly returned for the first time since the late-1920’s.
On December 26, 1957, now known as the Odeon, it was back to showing movies under the ownership of the British owned Rank Organisation, when they premiered “Pursuit of the Graf Spee”(original British title “Battle of the River Plate”). This was followed by Laurence Olivier in “Henry V”, presented in SuperScope. In mid-1959 the Rank Organisation dropped the Odeon and under new operators it became the Forum Theatre from June 15, 1959. A decade later it became the Forum 47th Street. In October 1980 it was renamed Movieland, a name it retained until March 1989 when it was closed.
The Shubert family sold the theatre in 1989 and it was closed on March 23, 1989. The lobby was turned into the Roxy Deli, while the auditorium became a disco, called Dance USA. By the mid-1990’s, both had closed, and the building sat vacant until 1998, when the auditorium was demolished to make way for the new W Hotel Times Square.
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Recent comments (view all 140 comments)
When it was Movieland, I played Personal Best here.
As the Holiday, 1955 photo added via Al Ponte’s Time Machine-New York Facebook page.
Hello-
i remember when E.T. opened here June of 1982 there were lines around the block for a few weeks.
Couple 1971 pics of the Forum in below link.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/21612362@N05/sets/72157629137226648/with/6948877089/?fbclid=IwAR1yqOGPN-v1_cRyUSinKoWV4hCX4HXAmeEfPLKcRvwAq8Q2QU9sBzMfxZk
David, the real cinema rarity in those pics is the Cine Lido marquee shot on the second pic. Please post this there.
Please update, theatre closed March 23, 1989
Hello-
is this the theater where the 1928 part-talkie version of Showboat opened?
bigjoe, “Show Boat” opened at the Globe.
http://cinematreasures.org/theaters/2924
This was my least favorite theater in Times Square; I wish Cinema Treasures had been around from the late 70s to the late 90s, then I may have appreciated this house a lot more than I did.
E.T. it appears in end credits of staying alive , in the background