Search

Theaters News Links

Advanced search
 

Theater Guide

Now listing 26,627 theaters & 1,598 photos… more
Browse by...
 

Add Your Cinema Treasure!

Add Theater
Add Photo (offline)
Add Theater News
 
 

Recent Comments

Nov 22 American Theatre (3)
Nov 21 Rialto Theatre (4)
Nov 21 Ne-Mar Cinema (2)
Nov 21 Cinemas West 4 (1)
Nov 21 Terra Vista… (2)
Nov 21 Brookhurst… (15)
Nov 21 Pirate Drive-In (2)
Nov 21 Rivoli Theater (4)
Nov 21 Rivoli Cinemas (7)
Nov 21 Hollywood Movies… (2)
 
 
 
  Discover. Preserve. Protect.

Ambassador Theatre

Brownsville, Brooklyn, NY
776 Saratoga Avenue
, Brownsville, Brooklyn, NY 11212 United States
(map)
Status: Closed/Demolished
Screens: Single Screen
Style: Unknown
Function: Unknown
Seats: 2000
Chain: Unknown
Architect: Charles A. Sandblom
Firm: Unknown
Add a photo for this theater!
Now one of the many forgotten movie theatres of Brooklyn, the Ambassador first opened in 1926, and was built and owned by Hyman Rachmil & Samuel Rinzler, aka the Supreme Circuit. At that time, they ran seven other large neighborhood theatres in Brooklyn, including the Capitol, Carroll, Congress, Sheffield, Stadium, Stone, and Supreme. Not surprisingly, William Fox purchased the Supreme Circuit during his late 1920s rampage to dominate the industry.

After Fox's bankruptcy at the onset of the Depression, most of his theatres in the Greater New York-New Jersey area were placed under the debtors-controlled Metropolitan Playhouses, which created three circuits-- Randforce, Skouras and Prudential-- to run them. All of the Brooklyn theatres (with the exception of the downtown Fox) went to Randforce, which was to be run by Sam Rinzler, one of the former owners of Supreme.

So the Ambassador reverted to its original ownership and remained under the Randforce banner for the rest of its life, or close to it. I don't know if the Ambassador was still operating by the 1970s, when the Randforce name was replaced by that of its parent company, United Artists Theatre Circuit.
Contributed by Warren G. Harris


YOUR COMMENTS

 
This theater must have been demolished since there is a "Health Center" located at this site today with a build date of 1973. This property has an address range of 774-778 Saratoga Avenue and uses 778 as its current address.

778 Saratoga Avenue, Brownsville, New York 11212

Block & Lot #: 03568 - 0001
Building Class: Health Center, Child Center, Clinic (I5)
School District: 23 map/schools
City Council District: 41
Police Precinct: 73 (Crime Statistics)
Political Contributions: search
BUILDING CHARACTERISTICS
Zoning R6
Building Size (F x D): 60.00ft x 200.00ft
Lot Size (F x D): 60.20ft x 200.00ft
Building Height: -
Total Gross Area of Building:
Year Built: 1973
Historic District?: No
Corner Lot?: Yes
Has Garage?: No
Number of Floors: 2
# Units: 0
FAR as built: 1.43
Allowable FAR: 2.43

MARKET VALUE1 HISTORY
Jun 01, 2005 $1,770,000
May 01, 2004 $1,560,000
Apr 01, 2003 $1,500,000
Mar 01, 2002 $1,445,000
Feb 01, 2001 $1,454,000
1 Market value obtain from the NYC Department of Finance
posted by Lost Memory on Jun 2, 2005 at 6:38am
Anyone got photos of the ambassador???


Sylvia Schildt
posted by sylvia schildt on Dec 23, 2005 at 11:36am
Sylvia, have you clicked on the links I included in the first post on this page ? I just tried the first one, and it works.

Or do you want better and/or more recent photos, showing the front and the interior ?

Peter Koch

I am on here as both "Peter.K" and "P.Koch".
posted by PKoch on Dec 23, 2005 at 12:03pm
better of all locations in chain

Herbie
posted by Herbie on Mar 21, 2006 at 7:25am
Herbie, what's "better of all locations in chain" Please explain. Thanks.
posted by PKoch on Mar 21, 2006 at 7:31am
The chain that owned the Ambassador,Stadium.

I grew up in those theatres

Pitkin,Palace,Ambassador,Stadium,Peoples Cinema
FOX[Flatbush ave],Metropolitan,Albee,Bklyn Paramount

Herbie
posted by Herbie on Mar 21, 2006 at 7:37am
Thanks, Herbie. Did the roar of the IRT el outside the Ambassador ever disturb your movie-going inside ? I have read that such was not the case for the Valencia in Jamaica, Queens, adjacent to the eastern end of the Jamaica BMT el.

Did you see live rock 'n roll in the '50's at the Bklyn Paramount ?
posted by PKoch on Mar 21, 2006 at 7:55am
El was not heard. I was not into Rock then. I grew up seeing movies.

My Mother took me to Ambassador on Tues eves. She collected dishes and wanted more than 1 set, so she took me so I got a free dish with admission. While you watched film, people would fall asleep and the dish would crash to the floor. The theatre would not replace so they would pay another admission. If you did not then your set would be short that place setting. It was torture to sit thru those joan Crawford films.
posted by Herbie on Mar 21, 2006 at 10:32am
Herbie, what Joan Crawford films did you sit through ?
posted by PKoch on Mar 21, 2006 at 11:05am
who knows the names now.
posted by Herbie on Mar 21, 2006 at 11:17am
Mildred Pierce comes to mind.
I went to bathroom 5 times and bought candy 2 times.
posted by Herbie on Mar 21, 2006 at 11:37am
I used to go to the Ambassador every Sunday in the early 1960's. A double feature was 35 cents. On special events, like when I saw the "Three Stooges" in person and "Chubby Checker" it would be 50 cents.

It was a great theatre with a smoking balcony. To an 8 year old it looked enormous. The concession stand was to the left as you entered the theatre. Right next door to it was a delicatessen...it sold great knishes. Across the street, on Saratoga Ave., was another restaurant. On the opposite side of the theatre, on Livonia Avenue was a toy store. Betsy Head park was just one block down Livonia and Saratoga. A few blocks away was the big shopping area of Pitkin Avenue.

You definitely could not hear the IRT # 2 train. The last stop on this train in Brooklyn was New Lots Ave. (intersecting with Ashford Street).

Although the neighborhood was quickly changing for the worse, I was able to walk to the Ambassador from 245 Amboy Street (between Dumont and Blake Avenue) all by myself and my younger brother with no fear or concern. With just $2.00, my brother and I were able to purchase tickets, buy popcorn, soda and candies.

I have great memories of the Ambassador. I believe by the very early 70's it was closed. It's a shame that it was torn down. Although by the late 60's it looked horrible on the outside.

I do have a photo of the corner across the street where the restaurant was, ca. 1961.
posted by Jose on Aug 25, 2006 at 8:16pm
I went to the Ambassador in the '50s and also, less frequently, to the Pitkin. At the Ambassador there was a children's section, with a matron who did not hesitate to shine her flashlight on boisterous kids,, and that was where we were required to sit. The Saturday show included two movies (if I remember correctly) and cartoons and a newsreel. I went with my brother, who was two years older than me. We walked from Hegeman Avenue and East 98th Street, near Beth-El (Brookdale) hospital. There were no problems with crime at that time.

You could not hear the IRT - but, then, if you lived near the IRT, as many people did, you learned not to hear it. I went there quite often growing up - one of the treats was that it was air conditioned (air-cooled?) in the summer. The luncheonette across the street was the Murder Inc. headquarters in the 1930s and 40s.

My older cousin took me to a rock and roll show at the Paramount when I was a child - I remember standing on the seat.
posted by Anna Stern on Apr 1, 2007 at 3:28pm
Thanks, Anna Stern and Jose, for posting your memories.

Anna Stern, what rock and roll acts did you see at the Bklyn Paramount as a child, and what did you think about them ?
posted by PKoch on Apr 2, 2007 at 6:41am
I went to the Ambassador theater in the 1940s. I was thirteen plus at the time.
Saturday morning my mother would give me twenty five cents and I would walk
from Rockaway Parkway to Saratoga and Livonia avenues,(we didn’t own a car).
The admission was ten cents for cartoons, a serial usually Flash Gordon or Dick Tracy or Buck Rogers,Movie-Tone News,two feature films, the first was a western the second a comedy or musical.
In between films there would be a raffle for a schwinn bicycle.
Come to think of it I never saw anybody win (hmmm :-))
After the movie I would go next door to Goldfrieds deli and spend the balance
of my fifteen cents for two hot dogs and a bottle of Pepsi (five cents each)
So from 10-am to 5pm on saturday my mother knew where I was and in good
hands of the matron with a flaslight walking the aisles to make sure nobody
got out of hand.

These kind of saturdays were probably some of the best days of my life.
To bad the younger generation of today don’t experience those kind of days.
posted by jack martin on Jun 12, 2007 at 2:58pm
Thanks, jack martin, for posting your Ambassador Theater movie memories from the 1940's. They are very special and important, and I enjoyed reading them.

Was the roar of the IRT el on Livonia ever a distraction ?

Have you looked at the images of the Ambassador Theater on nycsubway.org that I've posted links to, in my post dated May 12, 2004 near the top of this page ?
posted by PKoch on Jun 18, 2007 at 9:21am
The roar of the IRT going by never distracted us,except when the victim was laying on
the floor and was just about to tell us who (shot,stabbed,hit him with a club,threw him down the stairs)
And then we would try to read his lips.
posted by jack martin on Jun 22, 2007 at 10:17am
Viewed the pictures on nycsubway.org but can't really see the theater.
posted by jack martin on Jun 22, 2007 at 10:20am
Here's a 1953 view of the marquee: http://www.brooklynpix.com/photoframex1.php?photo=/photo99/T/theater349.jpg&key=THEATERS 349
posted by Warren G. Harris on Mar 23, 2009 at 11:31am
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!