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  Discover. Preserve. Protect.
Also known as Hughes Theatre

Franklin Theatre

Los Angeles, CA
5502 N. Figueroa Street
, Los Angeles, CA 90042 United States
(map)
Status: Closed
Screens: Single Screen
Style: Unknown
Function: Retail
Seats: 895
Chain: Unknown
Architect: Lyle N. Barcume
Firm: Unknown
Add a photo for this theater!
Opened in 1936, the Franklin Theatre was one of a few theatres that once was a part of the Highland Park area of Los Angeles. Only the Highland 3 is left in the area.
Contributed by William Gabel


YOUR COMMENTS

 
The Franklin Theatre building has not been torn down, although it has been closed for several decades and the building has been severely altered. For many years it was used as DeWitt Transfer and Storage and for several years in the late 1960s and early 1970s as the local headquarters for the Republican Party. At that time, the theater portion was still intact. However, it has since been gutted inside and used for various industrial type uses. The buildings parapet and tower were cut down in the early 1990s. Since 1994, is has been protected by it's inclusion in the Highland Park Historic Preservation Overlay Zone. This is the theater at which future Los Angeles Police Chief Darryl Gates had his little brush with the law for disturbing the peace as a teenager. As soon as the photo feature is back, I will add a 1964 picture of the Franklin as the DeWitt Storage Building. At that time, only the marquee was gone.
posted by Charlie Fisher on May 24, 2005 at 11:25pm
A followup to my earlier comments. The Franklin Theater building is a product of over 80 years of adaptive reuse. It was originally built in 1922 for Fred Stillwell as an automobile sales agency and garage. By 1929, it was operated by the local Chevrolet dealer. In 1934, new owner, E. H. Rose converted the building to a market. The facade was redesigned in cocrete by architect, W. L. Schmolle. The theater conversion ocurred in 1936, when Rose hired architect Lyle N. Barcume, engineer Harold P. King and contractor G. S. Griffith to convert the existing structure into a theater. The marquee, which was engineered by Blaine Noice (who engineer many of the buildings at the old Walt Disney Studios on Hyperion Avenue) and designed and built by QRS Neon Corporation, LTD, was installed in September of that year and the the venue opened as the "Hughes Theatre". The name was later changed to the "Franklin Theatre", under which it operated until 1952, when it closed and was converted to DeWitt Storage. Currently the building is used for a carpet cleaning business.
posted by Charlie Fisher on May 30, 2005 at 3:00pm
Film Daily Yearbook's from 1941 have it listed as the Franklin Theatre. Does anyone have earlier editions so we can put a year on when the name change occured?
posted by KenRoe on May 31, 2005 at 2:06am
The 1937 FDYB lists a 500-seat Franklin Theatre in Los Angeles, but with no specific address given. The previous volume (1936) has no listing for either a Franklin or Hughes, which was reported as the theatre's original name. But it seems possible that the Hughes was an instant failure and that the name was quickly changed before it ever got listed as such.
posted by Warren G. Harris on Jun 1, 2005 at 10:50am
I wonder if the name change had anything to do with its close proximty to Frankiln High School? There seems to be precedent for this.....there was a Belmont Theater about a mile and a half from Belmont High.
posted by patinkin on Aug 25, 2007 at 3:39am
From at least October, 1938, according to various issues of Boxoffice Magazine, the Franklin Theatre was operated by Kurt Laemmle, co-founder of Laemmle Theatres. Max and Kurt Laemmle are mentioned as operators of the Franklin, Park, and Dale Theatres in Highland Park as late as 1951.
posted by Joe Vogel on Jun 14, 2009 at 4:53pm
Hughes-Franklin was the name of a theater chain formed around 1930 by Howard Hughes and Harold B. Franklin. It was an extensive chain and they had a number of theaters in the Los Angeles area, and based on what little I've been able to find out about it some of their houses appear to have been operated in association with local partners. Considering the two names connected with it, I wonder if this could have been one of them? I don't think the chain lasted very long, though, so it might not have been around by the time the Franklin opened in 1936.
posted by Joe Vogel on Jan 16, 2010 at 12:15am
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