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  Discover. Preserve. Protect.
Also known as Knickerbocker Theatre

Ambassador Theatre

Washington, DC
2464 18th Street NW
, Washington, DC 20009 United States
(map)
Status: Closed/Demolished
Screens: Single Screen
Style: Adam, Neo-Classical
Function: Unknown
Seats: 1700
Chain: Unknown
Architect: Reginald W. Geare, Thomas W. Lamb
Firm: Unknown
Add a photo for this theater!
The Knickerbocker Theatre was built in 1915 for Harry Crandall, who owned a small chain of theaters in Washington, including the Lincoln and Metropolitan Theatres (and later, the Tivoli). It was designed by Reginald Geare on Columbia Road, with a sedate Georgian Revival facade that followed a curve on Columbia Road. The three-story facade, of limestone on red brick, also had touches of Colonial Revival and Neo-Classical styles. The interior of the 1,700-seat movie house was a graceful and not overly decorated blend of Adam and Neo-Classical styles.

The Knickerbocker Theatre opened on October 12, 1917, with the historical drama "Betsy Ross" and an appearance by the film's star, Alice Brady.

On January 28, 1922, during an intermission in the hit comedy film, "Get Rich Quick Wallingford", while the orchestra was playing, the Knickerbocker Theatre's poorly constructed roof collapsed after a heavy snowstorm over the past two days had piled almost two feet of snow on it. After the cave-in, 98 people were killed and 136 injured, in what was then Washington's worst disaster. Crandall closed all of his theaters in sympathy for the dead after the Knickerbocker Theatre disaster for a week, and was not charged with any wrongdoing, which was not the case of Geare, whose career as the most popular theater architect in the District of Columbia up until that time came to an abrupt end. He killed himself in 1927, as did Crandall, who later went bankrupt, a decade later.

In 1923, Thomas Lamb was hired to build a new theater in the shell of the Knickerbocker Theatre, which would be called the Ambassador Theatre. (Crandall would also replace Geare with Lamb on his next project, the Tivoli Theatre). Lamb's theater retained Geare's facade, which Lamb would embellish, but the rest of the theater was all new. Lamb's interior was a blend of Adam and Neo-Classic styles, somewhat more ornate than the Knickerbocker Theatre, but nearly the same size. The Ambassador Theatre opened on September 20, 1923 with the Warner Bros. film "High Life".

By the 1950's, the Ambassador Theatre was struggling to keep up with competition from television, and its owners opted to raze the historic theater in 1969, after years of low attendance. A bank was constructed on the site in 1978.
Contributed by Bryan, RickB


YOUR COMMENTS

 
A view of the Knickerbocker's auditorium after the roof's collapse can be seen here. The exterior of the theater (with a crowd watching the rescue and recovery operations) can be seen in this photograph.
posted by Bryan Krefft on Jul 11, 2004 at 7:59pm
Part of the history of a great motion picture theater is the films that played there. Listed below are the films that were featured at the Ambassador Theater in Washington, Dc from November 1957 until its closure in 1966. Research is from microfilms of The Washington Post and Variety. The dates listed are the Wednesday of the film's opening week, as in those years, most films opened on Wednesdays instead of the Friday openings that occur today. In most instances, the Ambassador played its films day-and-date with an other theater. In earlier years it was the Earle (later Warner) in downtown Washington. After the Warner began to feature hard-ticket roadshow films, the Ambassador shared its openings with the Metropolitan, which was also downtown.

11/20/57 The Tin Star
11/27/57 Bombers B-52
12/04/57 Battle Stripe/Armored Attack
12/11/57 Rodan
12/18/57 Esther Costello
12/25/57 Sayonara
02/19/58 The Deep Six
02/26/57 Fort Dobbs
03/05/58 Darby's Rangers
03/12/58 Cowboy
03/19/58 Lafayette Escadrille
03/26/58 Jumping Jacks/Scared Stiff
04/02/58 Marjorie Morningstar
04/30/58 Another Time, Another Place
05/07/58 Chase a Crooked Shadow
05/14/58 Too Much, Too Soon
05/21/58 The Left-Handed Gun
05/28/58 Vertigo
06/25/58 Attila
07/02/58 No Time for Sergeants
08/06/58 The Light in the Forest
08/13/58 Indiscreet
09/03/58 The Naked and the Dead
09/17/58 Wind Across the Everglades
09/24/58 Damn Yankees
10/15/58 Onionhead
10/29/58 The Blob
11/05/58 From the Earth to the Moon
11/12/58 The Spider/The Brain Eaters
11/19/58 Enchanted Island/Appointment With a Shadow
11/26/58 Home Before Dark
12/17/58 The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad
12/31/58 Auntie Mame
02/25/59 The House on Haunted Hill
03/04/59 Up Periscope
03/11/59 The Hanging Tree
03/18/59 Rio Bravo
04/08/59 The Trap
04/15/59 Alias Jesse James
04/29/59 Lonelyhearts
05/06/59 Westbound/Born Reckless
05/13/59 A Star is Born
05/20/59 The Man in the Net
05/27/59 The Young Philadelphians
06/17/59 Don't Give Up the Ship
07/01/59 Hercules
07/22/59 The Nun's Story
09/02/59 Yellowstone Kelly
09/09/59 John Paul Jones
09/16/59 That Kind of Woman
09/23/59 Sign of the Gladiator
10/07/59 Room 43
10/14/59 The FBI Story
11/11/59 -30-
11/18/59 The Jayhawkers
11/25/59 A Summer Place
12/16/59 Goliath and the Barbarians
12/30/59 The Miracle
01/13/60 Cash McCall
01/27/60 The Purple Gang
02/03/60 Seven Thieves
02/10/60 The Rise and Fall of Legs Diamond
02/17/60 Jack the Ripper
03/02/60 The Bramble Bush
03/23/60 This Rebel Breed
03/30/60 Guns of the Timberland
04/06/60 The Nun's Story
04/13/60 Visit to a Small Planet
04/27/60 Tall Story
05/11/60 Wake Me When It's Over
05/25/60 The Rat Race
06/15/60 Because They're Young (Ambassador ONLY)
06/22/60 Hannibal
06/29/60 Ice Palace
07/13/60 The Lost World
07/27/60 Hercules Unchained
08/10/60 Oceans 11
09/07/60 The Crowded Sky
09/14/60 13 Ghosts
09/21/60 Hell to Eternity
10/05/60 The Dark at the Top of the Stairs
10/26/60 Fast and Sexy
11/12/60 Girl of the Night
11/09/60 Journey to the Lost City
11/23/60 G. I. Blues
12/07/60 Sunrise from Campobello (moveover from Uptown)
12/14/60 Cinderfella
12/28/60 The Sundowners
01/25/61 Swiss Family Robinson
02/22/61 The Great Imposter
03/08/61 A Fever in the Blood/No Time for Sergeants
03/15/61 Gold of the Seven Saints/Auntie Mame
03/22/61 Giant
03/29/61 White Warrior
04/05/61 101 Dalmatians
04/26/61 The Sins of Rachel Cade
05/03/61 The Absent-Minded Professor
06/07/61 The Last Sunset
06/28/61 Parrish
07/19/61 Tammy Tell Me True
08/02/61 The King of the Roaring 20s/The Plunderers
08/09/61 The World by Night/The Steel Claw
08/16/61 Armored Command
08/23/61 Claudelle Inglish
09/13/61 Come September (day-and-date w/ Warner - Metropolitan DARK)
10/04/61 Greyfriar's Bobby
10/11/61 Splendor in the Grass
11/08/61 The Mask
11/15/61 Susan Slade
11/29/61 Blue Hawaii
12/20/61 Babes in Toyland
01/17/62 The George Raft Story
01/24/62 The Singer, Not the Song
01/31/62 Madison Avenue
02/07/62 A Majority of One
02/21/62 The Big Country/Thunder Road
02/28/62 The Outsider
03/14/62 The Couch/Malaga
03/21/62 Hitler
03/28/62 The Day the Earth Caught Fire
04/11/62 Splendor in the Grass/Fanny
04/18/62 Moon Pilot
05/09/62 Burn, Witch, Burn
05/16/62 Samar/House of Women
05/23/62 Love Me or Leave Me/Love is Better Than Ever
05/30/62 Escape from Zahrain
06/06/62 Lonely are the Brave
06/13/62 The Count of Monte Cristo
06/20/62 Merrill's Marauders
06/27/62 Bon Voyage
07/18/62 The Sad Sack/The Delicate Delinquent
07/25/62 The Music Man
09/26/62 Guns of Darkness
10/03/62 The Phantom of the Opera
10/10/62 The Chapman Report
10/31/62 Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?
11/21/62 Girls! Girls! Girls!
12/05/62 We'll Bury You/Who Was That Lady?
12/12/62 Boccaccio 70 (English language version)
12/19/62 Gay Purr-ee/The Sundowners
12/26/62 Gypsy
01/30/63 Who's Got the Action?
02/13/63 Son of Flubber
03/13/63 The Days of Wine and Roses
04/10/63 Critic's Choice
04/24/63 Giant
05/01/63 The Man from the Diners Club
05/15/63 Indiscreet
05/22/63 It Happened at the World's Fair
06/05/63 Island of Love
06/12/63 West Side Story (Ambassador ONLY)
07/03/63 Spencer's Mountain
07/17/63 Summer Magic
08/07/63 PT 109
08/21/63 Tarzan's 3 Challenges/The Slave
08/28/63 Wall of Noise
09/04/63 Of Love and Desire
09/11/63 The Castilian
09/18/63 Hootenanny Hoot
09/25/63 The Girl Hunters
10/02/63 Women of the World
10/09/63 Rampage
10/16/63 Twice Told Tales
10/23/63 Shock Corridor
10/30/63 Mary, Mary
11/13/63 The Incredible Journey
11/27/63 Palm Springs Weekend
12/11/63 No, My Darling Daughter
12/18/63 Four for Texas
01/08/64 Strait-Jacket
01/22/64 Who's Been Sleeping in My Bed?
02/05/64 Dead Ringer
02/19/64 Love With the Proper Stranger
03/18/64 Children of the Damned
03/25/64 A Tiger Walks
04/01/64 Paris When It Sizzles
04/15/64 A Global Affair/Tamahine
04/22/64 PT 109
04/29/64 A Yank in Vietnam/The Strangler
05/06/64 Empty Canvas
05/20/64 Lilies of the Field (Ambassador ONLY)
05/27/64 The Pink Panther (day and date with Calvert)
06/03/64 The Longest Day (Ambassador ONLY)
06/10/64 South Pacific (day and date with Calvert)
06/17/64 Oklahoma (Ambassador ONLY)
06/24/64 Lawrence of Arabia (Ambassador ONLY)
07/01/64 El Cid (Ambassador ONLY)
07/08/64 Ensign Pulver
07/22/64 The Long Ships
08/12/64 Viva Las Vegas
08/26/64 Looking for Love
09/02/64 Honeymoon Hotel
09/09/64 The Thin Red Line
09/16/64 Stop Train 349
09/23/64 Station Six-Sahara
10/07/64 Kisses for My President
10/21/64 The Stripper/The Hustler
10/28/64 Rio Conchos
11/18/64 From Russia, With Love/The Defiant Ones (Ambassador ONLY)
11/25/64 Whatever Happend to Baby Jane/Days of Wine & Roses (A ONLY)
12/02/64 Seven Days in May/Hud (Ambassador ONLY)
12/09/64 Charade/To Kill a Mockingbird (Ambassador ONLY)
12/16/64 The Carpetbaggers/That Kind of Woman (Ambassador ONLY)
12/23/64 Sex and the Single Girl
01/20/65 First Men in the Moon
01/27/65 Peyton Place/Return to Peyton Place
02/03/65 36 Hours
02/24/65 Dear Brigitte
03/10/65 How the West Was Won
03/17/65 A Boy Ten Feet Tall
03/24/65 Love Has Many Faces
03/31/65 John Goldfarb, Please Come Home
05/12/65 Synanon
05/19/65 Die! Die! My Darling
05/26/65 A High Wind in Jamaica
06/09/65 Up From the Beach
06/16/65 The Battle of the Villa Fiorita
06/23/65 Genghis Khan
07/14/65 The Sons of Katie Elder
08/04/65 Morituri
08/25/65 The Third Day
09/01/65 Pardners/Living It Up
09/08/65 My Blood Runs Cold/Murieta
09/15/65 Brakfast at Tiffany's/Sabrina
09/29/65 Marriage on the Rocks
10/27/65 Taboos of the World/The Conquered City
11/10/65 Village of the Giants/Seaside Swingers
11/17/65 The Bedford Incident
12/01/65 The Rounders/Zebra in the Kitchen
12/08/65 Gypsy/The Music Man
12/22/65 Boeing Boeing

After Boeing Boeing" completed its run, the Metropolitan in downtown Washington closed on January 3, 1966. The Ambassador stayed open as a second-run house for 16 more weeks.

01/05/66 Secret Agent Fireball/Spy in Your Eye
01/12/66 Requiem for a Gunfighter/Pussycat Alley
01/19/66 The Skull/The Mad Executioner
01/26/66 The Cincinnati Kid/Gunfighters of the Casa Grande
02/02/66 Zorba the Greek/Cat Ballou
02/09/66 Tom Jones/Irma La Douce
02/16/66 The Ipcress File/Ship of Fools
02/23/66 The Pawnbroker/The Collector
03/02/66 Darling
03/09/66 That Darn Cat/Kid Rodelo
03/16/66 The King and I/Agent from H. A. R. M.
03/23/66 The Ugly Dachshund
03/30/66 The Slender Thread/Bunny Lake is Missing
04/06/66 Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines
04/20/66 The Spy Who Came in From the Cold/Never Too Late

The Ambassador stayed standing until the fall of 1969 when it was demolished. Between 1966 and 1969 the theater served mostly as a rock concert hall with pyschedelic lights and patrons dancing where the seats used to be. There is now a bank located on the site.
posted by Ron3853 on Sep 5, 2004 at 7:20am
The address for the Ambassador/Knickerbocker Theatre was 2464 18th Street NW, Washington, DC.
posted by Chuck1231 on Nov 1, 2004 at 8:13pm
Prior to the beginning of the above list, this was the house that Paramount moved "10 Commandments" into on a semi-continuous basis after that film had failed to catch on at the RKO Keiths.
posted by veyoung on Jan 21, 2005 at 9:57pm
My grandmothers name is Ida V. Clarke. She was the Organist and one of the survivors. She had stepped out to place a call to my grandfather while on break. I have a newsclipping that ran 16 years later w/her picture. Would you like me to figure out how to scan and submit it?
posted by Mary Clarke Smith on Jul 21, 2005 at 4:53am
After TEN COMMANDMENTS failed as an advanced price reserved seat attraction at RKO Keith's, Paramount moved it one block north to the Playhouse Theater, not to the Ambassador. Interesting to recall that TEN COMMANDMENTS --- a longterm smash hit by any standard --- initially failed because of negative reviews. That's right; the so called critics said it wasn't much good.
posted by rlvjr on Oct 1, 2005 at 10:45am
Its hard to believe that "The Ten Commandments" didn't catch on and they had to move it. "The Ten Commandments" was the second highest grossing film up to this time only "Gone With The Wind" was larger until "Ben Hur" came along in 1959. The Keith's may have had another booking commitment which forced the film to move.brucec
posted by brucec on Oct 1, 2005 at 12:06pm
Does anybody have a photo of the front and marquee of this theater in its latter days (circa 1961-1966)? I would really like to see what it looked like - all the photos I've ever seen were on the interior, and it was razed before I was able to visit the site in person. Thanks!
posted by Ron3853 on Oct 2, 2005 at 5:39am
TEN COMMANDMENTS: No, RKO Keith's didn't have another booking obligation. Indeed they expected TEN COMMANDMENTS to play there for a year. Negative reviews simply killed the short-term box office until word-of-mouth belied the "critics."
posted by rlvjr on Oct 2, 2005 at 10:07am
THE AMBASSADOR was a beautiful and pleasant place to see a movie. Enter on 18th Street and the box office was inside, a florist shop was directly to the right of the box office, so the lobby always smelled and looked good. The interior was magnificent and there were balcony seats. Almost always playing the same first run as the WARNER downtown (or later the METROPOLITAN) admission prices here were about 5% lower. I saw maybe 50 to 75 first runs here and box office was solid. The Martin Luther King riot and looting spree, lasting days on end, killed most in-city business; but besides that the beautiful surrounding Mount Pleasant neighborhood became the #1 drive-by-shooting zone in Washington. Young people have no idea. Law enforcement was liberal (read that NIL). With racial and other crime justified daily on TV and in the Washington Post, and with corrupt city government, Washington DC was a wreck for 20-odd years. Not even Congressional workers on Capitol Hill were protected, not Senators, not Congressmen. Thus our great theaters died --- except the Warner, boarded up for years, but the office building above it kept demolition at bay.
posted by rlvjr on Oct 2, 2005 at 10:19am
"My grandmothers name is Ida V. Clarke. She was the Organist and one of the survivors. She had stepped out to place a call to my grandfather while on break. I have a newsclipping that ran 16 years later w/her picture."

Here is the article: http://img292.imageshack.us/img292/6617/knickerbocker2di.jpg
posted by Me1 on Oct 20, 2005 at 7:07am
Please see the article concerning Ida V. Clarke that my daughter scanned in and submitted today, thank you Marcy. I know my mother has mentioned a theatre or two I believe one of my great-uncles owned either Arthur of Lawrence Philips maybe two in the 1920's. I'll check for any pictures and information for you this weekend. I may be able to find a picture of the outside of the Knickerbocker too.
posted by Mary Clarke Smith on Oct 20, 2005 at 10:41am
Please see the article concerning Ida V. Clarke that my daughter scanned in and submitted today, thank you Marcy. I know my mother has mentioned a theatre or two I believe one of my great-uncles owned either Arthur of Lawrence Philips maybe two in the 1920's. I'll check for any pictures and information for you this weekend. I may be able to find a picture of the outside of the Knickerbocker too.
posted by Mary Clarke Smith on Oct 20, 2005 at 10:41am
My grandmother, Mabelle Bowers, also played the organ for silent movies at the Ambassador / Knickerbocker Theater. I don't think she was there when the roof caved in, but I do remember hearing her tell the story about it. She also played piano and organ at the Circle and Tivoli Theaters.
posted by CFaber on Nov 7, 2005 at 5:22am
I wish you could edit your previous posts. I accidentally wrote my grandmother's maiden name. Her name when she played at the theater was actually Mabelle (Bowers) Thickstun. Oops.
posted by CFaber on Nov 7, 2005 at 5:38am
An eBay seller, history-image, has a great photo of The Ambassador Theatre for sale, circa 1951. Search for the seller's name, then for "Ambassador" within his store listings.
posted by Poe McCook on Mar 5, 2006 at 5:06am
Also some great stuff on the theatre as a premier light-show venue during the Summer of Love:

http://www.tate.org.uk/tateetc/issue4/summeroflove.htm
posted by Poe McCook on Mar 5, 2006 at 5:12am
My grandfather's cousin reportedly married Knickerbocker (and other D.C. area) Theater owner Harry CRANDALL -- if anyone knows more about his personal data (or a book that is rumored to include his biography), I would love to hear from them...thanks!
posted by John Douglas on Mar 12, 2006 at 6:41am
There is a lot of information on Harry Crandall in the book:

Motion Picture Exhibition in Washington, D.C.: An Illustrated History of Parlors, Palaces, and Multiplexes in the Metropolitan Area, 1894-1997

The author is Robert K. Headley
Published in 1999 by McFarland & Company, Inc.
Jefferson, NC & London

I was able to purchase it at Barnes & Noble.

Most of the bibliographical info is on pages 151 through 155, althouh he is mentioned throughout the book. It does NOT give his wife's name, although she is mentioned twice as "his widow." He had a daughter who married a man named John Payette, who also was involved in the movie theater business.
posted by Ron3853 on Mar 12, 2006 at 1:35pm
This is the theatre where I saw South Pacific in 1964. We moved later in the year before the firsr DC riots. I had thought we moved in early 1964 but clearly remember seeing this movie as we lived on 16th Street *(2400) and it was not that far a walk to it.

Now if I can just find the one that showed Mary Poppins...

George Senda
Concord Ca
posted by GSenda on May 12, 2006 at 7:27am
"Mary Poppins" played first-run at the Ontario Theater, located in the same neighborhood as the Ambassador. The film opened there in October 1964 and played until the next spring when "The Sound of Music" replaced it.
posted by Ron3853 on May 12, 2006 at 7:30am
I worked at the Ambassador Theater when it was a rock hall. That was from August 1967 to January 1968. It was an amazing place with one of the best lightshows ever. Bands that played there included Jimi Hendrix for a week at $1.50 - $2.50 a ticket; Moby Grape, John Lee Hooker, Vanilla Fudge, The Hollies, Jr Wells, the Fugs, Canned Heat, Strawberry Alarm Clock and more.
posted by Mike Schreibman on Aug 5, 2006 at 7:19pm
I have not been on this site lately and am pleased that there are some relatives of survivors of the Knickerbocker disaster. My grandfather (Oreste Natiello) was in the orchestra (french horn). His brother was the conductor: Ernesto Natiello. If you have not already contacted Debbie Chambers, do so. She is writing a book about the disaster and has many resources to share. She can be found on Ancestry.com or Genealogy.com. Just search for her postings or for information on the Knickerbocker Theater. She lined me up with a Canadian Company that did a documentory on the Knickerbocker. You can get a copy of it from Disasters of the
Twentieth Century website. Go to their store. The documentary is good and I enjoyed being in it but some of the information is not
true, even some of what I said. I had no opportunity to review
questions ahead of time or to edit what I said. I was probably
nervous or my memory was not that good that day. I was surprised at some of what I said. I never knew my grandfather but have done a
lot of reading on the theater - mostly old newspapers and some
websites. Debbie sent me picures.
posted by Nick Barkas on Dec 30, 2006 at 3:22pm
A 1951 photo of the Ambassador Theater can be seen here.

posted by Lost Memory on Jun 5, 2007 at 12:48pm
The Knickerbocker Theater disaster happened on January 28, 1922, not on the 22nd as stated above.
posted by Nick Barkas on Jun 5, 2007 at 2:57pm
A NY Times story claims that the roof collapsed on January 8, 1922. At least we're sure it happened in 1922.


NINE MEN ACCUSED IN THEATRE COLLAPSE; Architect, Builders and Inspectors Are Ordered Held for Grand Jury Action.LAX METHODS CONDEMNED. Coroner's Jury Calls for Careful Examination of All Other Washington Theatres.

NY Times February 15, 1922

WASHINGTON, Feb. 14.--Nine men were ordered held for the Grand Jury by the coroner's jury which brought in a verdict tonight in connection with the collapse of the roof of the Knickerbocker Motion Picture Theatre Jan. 8, resulting in the death of ninety-eight persons.

posted by Lost Memory on Jul 3, 2007 at 7:30pm
This is an earlier story in the NY Times about the roof collapse. I believe the date of January 28, 1922 posted by Nick Barkas on Jun 5, 2007 at 2:57pm is correct.

THEATRE WRECK INQUIRIES STARTED; SENATE WILL ACT; District of Columbia Experts and Grand Jury View the Knickerbocker Ruins. CAPPER OFFERS RESOLUTION Hints of Collusion of Inspectors and Contractors--Resolution Presented in House Also. POLICE DEATH LIST ONLY 95 Duplications Enlarged Previous Total--Engineer Suggests Defectin Material of Roof. Errors Found in Previous Lists. Grand Jury Inspects Ruins. START INQUIRIES INTO THEATRE WRECK Suggests Defect In Material. Capper for Stringent Inquiry. Many Firetraps, Says Frelinghuysen. White House Reception Put Off.

NY Times January 31, 1922, Tuesday

WASHINGTON, Jan. 30.--Thorough investigation to determine the responsibility for the Knickerbocker Theatre disaster of Saturday night was promised today by officials of the District Government, leaders in both branches of Congress, the Federal Courts and the Coroner.

"Saturday night" would have been January 28.

posted by Lost Memory on Jul 3, 2007 at 7:54pm
Check all the major newspapers of January 29, 1922 and the not so major ones. They all ran headline stories about the crash that occured the day before. NOAA, other weather information websites, and some eyewitness accounts on the web also have the correct date. Only the Army Quartermaster's website is incorect.
posted by Nick Barkas on Jul 4, 2007 at 7:04am
The first Times story was probably a typo as far as the date is concerned. It looks like the "8" was omitted. As I posted above, I believe the correct date is January 28.

posted by Lost Memory on Jul 4, 2007 at 10:07am
A Kimball theater organ size 2/8 was installed in the Ambassador Theater in 1923.

posted by Lost Memory on Oct 1, 2007 at 7:40am
Here is a new link for the 1951 photo posted on June 5, 2007.

posted by Lost Memory on Jul 31, 2008 at 6:55pm
A photo from November 24, 1925:
http://www.shorpy.com/node/5024?size=_original

Harold Lloyd as "The Freshman" is playing as orphans gather under thr marquee.
posted by J.F. Lundy on Dec 3, 2008 at 5:04pm
Opening view of the Knickerbocker on 13 October 1917:
http://www.shorpy.com/node/5701?size=_original
posted by J.F. Lundy on Mar 10, 2009 at 4:28pm
Renewing link.
posted by Ed Blank on Mar 30, 2009 at 7:43pm
While the Ambassador played BECAUSE THEY'RE YOUNG between June 15-June 24 of 1961, the Metropolitan played THE RAT RACE.

The Metropolitan was closed between September 6 and October 4 of 1961. The Ambassador played COME SEPTEMBER.

While the Ambassador played WEST SIDE STORY between June 12-July 2 of 1963, the Metropolitan played THE WONDERUL WORLD OF THE BROTHERS GRIMM.

While the Ambassador played a series of second-run features between May 20-July 7 of 1964, the Metropolitan played the first run of WHAT A WAY TO GO.

While the Ambassador played a series of second-run features between November 18-December 22 of 1964, the Metropolitan played the first run of GOODBYE CHARLIE.

While the Ambassador played the first run of JOHN GOLDFARB, PLEASE COME HOMEY between April 14-May 11 of 1963, the played the Metropolitan played the first run of CHEYENNE AUTUMN.


posted by Stephen Connell on Jun 10, 2009 at 9:41pm
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