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Also known as Los Angeles, Orpheum

Lyceum Theater

Los Angeles, CA
227 S. Spring Street
, Los Angeles, CA, United States
(map)
Status: Closed/Demolished
Screens: Single Screen
Style: Unknown
Function: Unknown
Seats: 800
Chain: Unknown
Architect: Unknown
Firm: Unknown
Add a photo for this theater!
The Lyceum was located at 227 S Spring Street. Opened in 1888 as the Los Angeles Theater, became the second Los Angeles Orpheum, closed in 1941 as the Lyceum Theater. Demolished in 1941.
Contributed by David Thompson


YOUR COMMENTS

 
The seating capacity given in the Film Daily Yearbook, 1941 is 800 seats.
posted by KenRoe on Feb 15, 2005 at 7:06am
The architectural style of the Lyceum was Richardsonian Romanesque, named for its progenitor, the Boston architect Henry Hobson Richardson. So popular was this style in the 1880s that, by the end of that decade, the streets of Los Angeles were lined with dozens of prominent Romanesque buildings, including the City Hall, the Los Angeles County Courthouse, and Los Angeles High School.
posted by Joe Vogel on Mar 3, 2005 at 5:46am
There is a picture of the Lyceum on the LA Library online database.
posted by ken mc on Aug 26, 2005 at 5:55pm
Here is the picture, courtesy of the LA Library. This was an interesting looking building, to say the least.

http://jpg2.lapl.org/pics09/00014235.jpg
posted by ken mc on Sep 19, 2005 at 6:48pm
Another view, from the LAPL website:

http://jpg2.lapl.org/pics22/00045571.jpg
posted by ken mc on Sep 24, 2005 at 2:11pm
Two photos from the same source:

http://jpg2.lapl.org/theater2/00015379.jpg

http://jpg2.lapl.org/theater2/00015376.jpg
posted by ken mc on Nov 28, 2005 at 3:41pm
This is from the LA Times, dated 5/3/13. Hard to imagine throngs of pedestrians downtown at midnight, nowadays:

LYCEUM THEATER BLAZE CREATES CAFÉ PANIC

Fire in the Lyceum Theater building at 225-227-229 South Spring Street, between 11 o’clock and midnight last night resulted in a loss of approximately $10,000, caused a panic in the Rathskeller Café and blocked traffic for an hour and a half. Flames shooting to the top of the building illuminated the sky for blocks downtown and thousands of late pedestrians and throngs from the theaters gave the police a lot of trouble crowding beyond the fire lines.

The Lyceum building is a four-story stone structure containing offices of the theater and several art and musical studios, among them the Marceau photographic gallery on the top floor. Water, which caused most of the damage, deluged the interior of the theater proper. Attaches of the theater announced at midnight, however, that no real damage has been done to the interior of the playhouse.

Damage totaling several thousand dollars was done to the Majestic Bar at no. 225 S. Spring Street, the O.L. Wuerker jewelry house at No. 229 and offices in the Theater Mechanics Association building at No. 231. Dick Ferris, the theatrical manager and promoter, created a furor in saving manuscript and valuable papers from his office facing South Spring Street on the second floor. The building was for years known as the Orpheum Theater building and the name was changed when the Orpheum sought new quarters.

Scores of merrymakers were dining in the Rathskeller at No. 235 ½ South Spring Street, when proprietor Matthewson quietly announced that there was a fire in the theater building and that the diners might leave the restaurant without paying their checks if they wished. There was a rush for the door and in less than half a minute the restaurant was cleared. No damage was done there, however, and many of the guests returned to complete their midnight dinners after the fire lines were withdrawn.
posted by ken mc on Jun 6, 2007 at 5:30pm
LA Times reported another significant fire at the Los Angeles theater on 10/21/99. The theater was being used for plays at that time, which is not surprising given the date.
posted by ken mc on Jun 7, 2007 at 11:23am
Here is an LA Times excerpt about the demolition. The story is dated 3/17/41.

OLD LYCEUM THEATER SOON TO BE TORN DOWN

The Lyceum Theater, on Spring Street between 2nd and 3rd Streets, is to be torn down to make way for a parking station. To a modern generation of showgoers this may mean less than nothing, but to old timers who remember, it is an event to be chronicled in letters huge as life itself, because this marks the passing of a landmark in the world of entertainment.
posted by ken mc on Jul 6, 2007 at 8:36pm
This is a 1900 drawing. The Lyceum is in the middle of the 200 block of Spring Street:
http://tinyurl.com/25cyu4
posted by ken mc on Aug 23, 2007 at 10:06pm
A Wurlitzer theater organ opus 361 style 135A was installed in the Lyceum Theater on 10/29/1920.

posted by Lost Memory on Sep 8, 2007 at 4:26pm
I know this isn't the correct page, but does anyone know on which page I can find the Hotchkiss, Waldeck's Casino at 344 S. Spring? I know I've posted comments on the Hotchkiss but I can't find it.
posted by vokoban on Sep 11, 2007 at 12:11pm
Advertised as Fischer's Lyceum in 1911:
http://tinyurl.com/2vw7je
posted by ken mc on Oct 28, 2007 at 5:09pm
End of the road in 1941:
http://jpg3.lapl.org/pics41/00070226.jpg
posted by ken mc on Oct 30, 2007 at 8:21pm
Fischer was twenty years ahead of his time, per this 1908 LA Times article:
http://tinyurl.com/23sc48
posted by ken mc on Nov 16, 2007 at 7:19am
Here is a 1939 photo from the USC archive:
http://tinyurl.com/c3xxsw
posted by ken mc on Apr 26, 2009 at 2:12pm
This was in the LA Times in May 1914:
http://tinyurl.com/lskm3f
posted by ken mc on Aug 6, 2009 at 9:32pm
Here is a circa 1930s photo:
http://tinyurl.com/luonxp
posted by ken mc on Sep 1, 2009 at 5:20pm
Who did you "borrow" that photo from?

posted by Lost Memory on Sep 1, 2009 at 5:27pm
This is part of a January 1922 article in the LA Times:

Purchase of the Douglas Building at Third and Spring streets as a city hall annex was recommended to the City Council yesterday. A committee has been appointed to investigate the buildings offered to the city for the housing of offices now located in the Normal Hill building, which is to be razed to make way for the new $1,500,000 Central Library.

Originally, the majority of the committee had recommended in its report that the city purchase the Lyceum Theater building and adjoining lot on Spring street between Second and Third. The Perry estate, owners of the Lyceum Theater property, however withdrew its offer to sell, so the committee eliminated this portion of its report.
posted by ken mc on Nov 11, 2009 at 8:01pm
This was in an LA Times column by Lee Shippey in November 1930:

The new theater on Broadway between Sixth and Seventh is to be called the Los Angeles Theater, and the announcement says “It is the first theater to be named in honor of the city”.

Jay Hunt, veteran actor, writes us that “in 1890, my wife and I appeared in the Los Angeles Theater on Spring Street, the same that is now called the Lyceum and is a picture house. Maude Granger, then a very popular actress, was the star. Harry Wyatt was manager of the theater at that time. We played a three-night engagement, but changed the bill every night because the city then wasn’t big enough to provide more than one good audience for each play.”
posted by ken mc on Nov 14, 2009 at 12:52pm
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