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  Discover. Preserve. Protect.
Also known as Olympia Theatre

Gusman Center for the Performing Arts

Miami, FL
174 E. Flagler Street
, Miami, FL 33131 United States
(map)
305.372.0925
Status: Open
Screens: Single Screen
Style: Atmospheric
Function: Performing Arts
Seats: 2200
Chain: Unknown
Architect: John Eberson
Firm: Unknown
Add a photo for this theater!
Built in 1926 by Paramount and designed by John Eberson, it was the first of many atmospheric theatres.

After years of showing films, the former Olympia Theatre was purchased in 1970 by Maurice Gusman for the Miami Philharmonic Orchestra.

Renamed as the Maurice Gusman Cultural Center, the theater reoperned in 1972. In 1975, the theatre was donated to the City of Miami and underwent a two-year renovation.

It is now called the Gusman Center for the Performing Arts.

Related Websites

Gusman Center for the Performing Arts (Official)
Contributed by Cinema Treasures


YOUR COMMENTS

 
to whom it may concern, i enjoy watching your plays ,but unfortunate i can't come to see all of them and i was wondering if you have them on video. if so can you please email me and give me a price list and other information about your plays thank you. keep up the good work.
posted by MAXINE on Apr 25, 2001 at 9:51am
The Paramount Theatre seated 2200 people when it was a movie theatre.
posted by William on Nov 25, 2003 at 1:57pm
I must challenge the opening statement that this was "the first of many atmospheric theatres." It was one of Eberson's earliest and possibly the first of its type in Florida. But it was preceded by at least the 1923 Hoblitzelle Majestic in Houston, Texas, and the 1925 Capitol in Chicago.
posted by Warren G. Harris on Sep 14, 2004 at 1:10pm
Here is a photo dated 1926 of the Olympia's atmospheric auditorium.
posted by Bryan Krefft on Sep 23, 2004 at 6:12pm
A photo dated 1928 of the Olympia's marquee (with a portion of the vertical sign barely visible at the top of the picture) can be seen here.
posted by Bryan Krefft on Sep 24, 2004 at 6:07pm
Found this theatre though a newly introduced friend and couldn't believe how utterly beautiful this Eberson 'atmospheric' theatre is. I lived in FL for over 30 years and never visited this theatre in Miami as I didn't know of its existence and didn't have the theatre 'bug' then. Sure wish the Paramount Theatre in Palm Beach FL still existed though. My husband knows the man who bought the Paramount sign many years ago and now wonder if he still has it today??
posted by Patsy on Jan 9, 2005 at 7:31am
Small photos and brief history at this link:

http://www.historicpreservationmiami.com/olympia.html
posted by TC on Feb 25, 2005 at 1:21pm
In a previous post I mentioned that my husband knows the man who bought the Paramount sign....he still owns it today, but it is one of the original signs and not the curved sign that still exists on the building that isn't used as a theatre anymore. And now there is a link to this Paramount on CT.
posted by Patsy on Feb 25, 2005 at 3:27pm
Here is a pic, look at that great box-office

http://www.agilitynut.com/05/1/olympia.jpg
posted by RobertR on Apr 28, 2005 at 11:29am
The Olympia is a true palace. As a kid I would just stare at the walls and the ceiling when the movie got boring. I often went in at 11:00am and came out after dark having seen the same film over and over again. A smuggled in hoagie from the nearby Woolworths provided a meal.

This was the downtown home of most Disney and Doris Day films, the only ones I could get into. I often asked strangers to accompany me to R rated films and they willingly obliged in that more innocent age. I saw WILD IN THE STREETS, THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY, and BONNIE AND CLYDE this way.

The floating clouds and cool air conditioning made me a cinema buff for life. In the early 70's the Miami Police shut down the 3-D soft core porn flick THE STEWARDESSES and arrested manager Jimmy Barnett.

For more information on Downtown Miami cinemas and Jimmy Barnett check out a documentary by University of Miami professor Corky Irick called A FEW THINGS I KNOW ABOUT MIAMI. It can be found at the Coral Gables public library on VHS.

posted by AlAlvarez on May 24, 2005 at 11:37am
Have seen Barbara Cook In Concert here and for many years The Miami International Film Festival. This was until one year unclaimed seats were sold at the last minute and instead of waiting for the patrons to enter and make their way to seating, the lights went out, the program started and the aisles were filled with the lastest arrivals who sat there throughout the film.
I never revisited.
posted by Carl ` on Jul 20, 2005 at 6:36am
Have seen Barbara Cook In Concert here and for many years The Miami International Film Festival. This was until one year unclaimed seats were sold at the last minute and instead of waiting for the patrons to enter and make their way to seating, the lights went out, the program started and the aisles were filled with the lastest arrivals who sat there throughout the film.
I've never revisited.
posted by Carl ` on Jul 20, 2005 at 6:38am
Before it became Gussman hall, I rember going to the OLYMPIA to see John Wayne in: THE GREEN BERETS!, that was the most beautiful house on Flager street!
posted by movietheatreowner on Aug 28, 2005 at 9:02am
A color photo of the Gusman AKA Olympia Theatre auditorium.
http://i4.photobucket.com/albums/y147/Chuck1231/Florida%20Theatres/GusmanCenterAKAOlympiaMiamiFl.jpg
posted by Chuck1231 on Sep 11, 2005 at 9:45pm
Wow! What memories..., It had for those days a marvelously large movie screen....
posted by movietheatreowner on Sep 12, 2005 at 2:32am
This is now known as OLYMPIA THEATRE AT GUSMAN HALL. Common sense prevails!
posted by AlAlvarez on Apr 1, 2006 at 11:46pm
The Olympia Theatre opened on February 26th. 1926.
posted by William on Apr 12, 2006 at 7:25am
A belated "Happy 80th" to the Gusman/Olympia! Spent most of Februarys there for the first 18 years of the Miami Film Festival, with periodic visits for the likes of Laurie Anderson, Philip Glass, Dead Can Dance (what turned out to be one of their final performances), Nina Simone (ditto), and the now-defunct Florida Philharmonic.

We came close to losing this one to demolition for a parking garage (until Coppertone suntan products mogul Maurice Gusman stepped in), and it's almost fallen victim to political whim through the years, including one city commissioner's proposal to convert the space to a flea market.

Favorite Gusman/Olympia evening: the Miami Film Fest's 1989 revival of "The Wind" (Lillian Gish), accompanied by the Florida Philharmonic under guest conductor Carl Davis. Ten minute standing ovation, continuing with calls of "Bravo" to musicians down the streets, all the way to the parking garage.
posted by S Porridge on Apr 12, 2006 at 11:57am
Remember "The Police" performing there in the early 80's. Footage of that concert is released under "Police Live" DVD. Also, worked for Univision and did a lot of live special events. Great venue!
posted by spiderman2000s on Apr 15, 2006 at 8:18am
As a native Miamian I went to the Olympia many times in the forties and fifties. My dad would take us there to see the "stage shows." He told us it was the last theatre south of Atlanta that was booking vaudeville acts. Not long after its renovation as the Gusman my wife and I went to see Don McLean perform. It was precisely as I remembered it. They preserved the wonderful ambience of the Olympia.
posted by ArtFunk on Jul 11, 2006 at 2:19am
Tonight I found a very nice website with much information and many photographs of the Olympia. Check it out: http://www.sftos.org/olympia01.htm
posted by ArtFunk on Jul 19, 2006 at 4:49pm
Wow. They even put back the fake foliage and birds. Nicely done!

posted by Life's too short on Jul 19, 2006 at 5:24pm
GAGA & YOYO at Olympia
The old Olympia Theatre in downtown Miami was my first introduction to the movie palace. My grandmother, Adele Valibus (GaGa to me) was a buyer for Burdines department stores and had her office nearby. My mother and aunt spent much of their childhood at the Olympia while their mom was at work. My mother often talked of being scared silly by some version of Phantom of the Opera that showed there when she was a kid. When I was a boy in the 1960’s it was always referred to as The OLD Olympia theatre. GaGa took me to there to see Boatniks and Herbie the Love Bug movies. More than the movies I liked the slightly run down ornate interiors, starry ceiling, odd spaces and balconies. I think I remember a suit of armor that made me a little a nervous. When I was in 6th grade the Olympia had become Gusman Hall and our class from the Cushman School went to see Yoyo Ma perform when I believe he was making his American debut. We were very excited because he was just a little older than us and was getting a lot of publicity. I’ve been is several spectacular theatres since then but for purely sentimental reasons the Olympia Theatre is my favorite of all time.
posted by PEP on Aug 4, 2006 at 11:24pm
One of the last times I went to the Gusman, was to catch a thrilling performance by a flamenco dancer whose name, oddly, escapes me at the moment (I want to say Paco de Lucia, but that can't be right, since he's a renowned flamenco _guitarrist_, of course).

This must've been around 1991.

It is true that I have attended the odd piano recital and Miami Film Festival showing, there, but despite these forays, I can't say that the Gusman is one of my favourite places, save for its wonderful décor, it goes without saying.

From marble railings, and gold-leaf relief cherubs surrounding the lobby, not to mention the sumptuous bathroom facilities, with genuine red brocade pouffes in front of a Versailles-sized mirrors, the Gusman is a true moviepalace relic of a sadly bygone age.

I think what prevents it from fulfilling its promise, is that Miamians are notoriously fickle about location, and as soon as the 1970s-early 1980s drive to the southwest "suburbs" began, the Gusman was a goner as popular venue.

Parking -- including its outrageous valet prices -- and the rough, seedy quality of downtown Miami after dark, didn't help.

For décor, nothing can beat the Gusman (named after Maurice Gusman, the local patron of the Arts, who made his fortune in rubber: raffishly, he was known as the Condom King to us locals, since it was rumoured that was his number one product).

N.B.: This theatre is not to be confused with the much later, much more modern theatre with practically the same name, within the University of Miami's campus in Coral Gables.
posted by JWX on Jan 18, 2007 at 12:47am
Does anybody know anything about a former Strand Theatre in Miami?

One morning while communting from my home in Hollywood down to my job in Coral Gables, I decided to avoid the terrible traffic on I-95 and find some avenue that ran parallel to the interstate. And somewhere between NW 29th Street and NW 14th Street along NW 7th Avenue I found a small theatre with a marquee and classic double doors. It was labeled the STRAND with the S having fallen off some time ago. It currently seems to be a small church/prayer home now. I will try to take some pictures of it. Can anybody here identify what part of town/neighborhood we would call this area? It's definitely industrial and very poor. Perhaps that might help with some research (where I'm finding NO luck).
posted by Stage Manager on Mar 13, 2007 at 9:51pm
I was lucky enough to get 5 minutes inside the stunning Olympia when I was in Miami last januari. It was a tuesday night and the theatre was closed, but a lovely lady who was about to close off and go home let me in for just a bit. There was no one else there but her and two friends and me and my girlfriend. As we were making her wait, all I could do is take a couple of pictures and be awed by my first atmospheric experience. Check out the photos on my flickrstream: http://www.flickr.com/photos/pulp-o-rama/443824507/in/set-72157594343161371/
I also purchased an old postcard from around the opening time I think, or actually, when did it become a 'Publix' theatre? http://www.flickr.com/photos/pulp-o-rama/443835992/in/set-72057594129975085/
posted by Roloff on Apr 4, 2007 at 12:22am
What a great postcard!

It was already there by 1926 so this must be an opening postcard. I believe it was always Publix with the company eventually becoming Florida State Theatres, then ABC Florida State. By the time ABC became Plitt Theatres, the Olympia was already Gusman Hall having spent a few years of Blaxploitation and horror flicks.
posted by AlAlvarez on Apr 4, 2007 at 5:18am
Yes, regarding the claim of the Olympia being the "first of many atmospheric Eberson theaters," according to information posted on this site:

The Dallas Majestic Theater opened in April 11, 1921.

http://cinematreasures.org/theater/227/

The Wichita Orpheum Theater opened in September 4, 1922.

http://cinematreasures.org/theater/381/

The Houston Majestic Theater opened in January 29, 1923.

http://cinematreasures.org/theater/1672/

The Capitol Theater, Chicago, opened January 19th. 1925

All preceded the 1926 opening of Eberson's Paramount Olympia in Miami.
posted by RobbKCity on Jun 17, 2007 at 9:03pm
Although the Olympia appears to have opened at a PUBLIX theatre, the precursor of ABC Florida State Theatres, I have recently purchased a January 1932 Newsletter from SPARKS' Theatres listing it as one of theirs on that date.

January 29, 30, 31 RUDY VALEE in Person!
Stanleigh Malotte at the mighty organ!
Saturday Midnight Show at 11:30pm Eddie cantor in THE KID FROM SPAIN

Other sites included are:
Coral Gables (not the Gables on Ponce de Leon)
Paramount (downtown house looking nothing like the one I remember) Roxy (24 East 1st Avenue)
Rex (205 East Flagler Street)
Rosetta (Little River, later a Wometco site)
Community (Miami Beach)

Does anyone have any info on SPARKS and their Miami history? I had never heard of them and I worked for ABC for over 7 years in the 70's.
posted by AlAlvarez on Jun 21, 2007 at 7:55am
After being awarded an inspection and repair contract for the Gusman Center in 1992, InterAmerica Stage, Inc. provided rigging hardware upgrades, control system repairs and installed a new orchestra shell ceiling hoist and controls. The theatre recently underwent another renovation led by Architect R.J Heisenbottle & Associates. A new auditorium lighting bridge and other improvements were achieved. Every year the Miami International Film Festival is hosted by the Gusman Center.

http://iastage.com/historical_renovations
posted by krk on Jun 26, 2007 at 8:06am
Before it was demolished for the Olympia, this site was the Hippodrome.

http://preview.aalvarez733.photosite.com/album1/scan0020.html
http://preview.aalvarez733.photosite.com/album1/scan0019.html
posted by AlAlvarez on Jul 17, 2007 at 2:15pm
Here is that mystery link to SPARKS' THEATRES I mentioned above.

http://preview.aalvarez733.photosite.com/Album1/Roxy_Rex_CoralGables.html
posted by AlAlvarez on Jul 17, 2007 at 7:17pm
This is an article about the 80th anniversary of the Olympia Theater.

posted by Lost Memory on Jul 31, 2007 at 7:31pm
I finally found the Publix-Sparks connection.

According to MARQUEE Edward Sparks was General Manager for Paramount-Publix in Florida. He apparently named, what eventually became Florida State Theatres, after himself in the 30's.
posted by AlAlvarez on Aug 1, 2007 at 7:16pm
A Wurlitzer theater organ opus 1198 style 260 was installed in the Olympia Theater on 11/6/1925.

posted by Lost Memory on Sep 29, 2007 at 7:17pm
Just visited this theater for the first time, yesterday, for a restored print of 'Once Upon a Time in the West,' presented by the Miami International Film Festival. Architecturally, it seems an exact replica of the Tampa Theatre, which is to say, it's awesome. The presentation, however, is lacking. The screen does not appear to have proper movable masking, aperture shadow was present through some of the film, and the screen is not quite wide enough to fully convey 2.35:1. Worst of all, however, the acoustics are *very* bad. A large wooden stage extends from the screen, and there's not enough carpeting in this cavernous space to absorb the sonic stuff, rendering all audio tinny and echoey. I couldn't make out about 15% of the dialogue in the I was watching. Management seemed overworked and preoccupied.
posted by Born Jaded on Mar 3, 2008 at 10:33am
Here is a recent close-up view of the Olympia.

posted by Lost Memory on Apr 7, 2008 at 8:16am
Great shot, LM. Elvis himself did once perform live at the Olympia.
posted by AlAlvarez on Apr 7, 2008 at 10:53am
Sparks' Theatre News, 1932-33.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/25725093@N07/sets/72157604592679247/
posted by AlAlvarez on Apr 17, 2008 at 11:13am
LM, as ALWAYS! That is a beautiful pic! Nice. I still don't understand why Miami has a tendency to rename established institutions. I would have never used Gusman Hall to rename this popular theatre. If it started as the Olympia it should remain that way forever.
posted by Louis of Pompano Beach on Aug 27, 2008 at 5:19pm
This site has some photos. Click each photo to expand it.

posted by Lost Memory on Jan 23, 2009 at 6:59pm
The city of Miami did not rename the Olympia. Maurice Gusman saved it from the wrecking ball, refurbished it into a concert hall and named it after himself. He then left it to the city when he passed away.
posted by AlAlvarez on Jan 23, 2009 at 7:46pm
The name here should be changed to Olympia Theater at the Gusman Center for the Performing Arts.

http://gusmancenter.org/
posted by AlAlvarez on Apr 24, 2009 at 5:58pm
The mezzanine of the Olympia:

View photo
posted by AlAlvarez on May 29, 2009 at 8:35am
Vintage shot of the Olympia marquee circa 1928 (BEAU BROADWAY):

View photo
posted by AlAlvarez on May 29, 2009 at 8:43am
How the boxoffice used to face:

View photo

posted by AlAlvarez on May 29, 2009 at 8:53am
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