Bijou Theatre

29 W. Main Street,
Oklahoma City, OK 73104

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Texas2step
Texas2step on December 16, 2017 at 4:14 pm

A 1906 ad shows an address of 29 W. Main Street for the Bijou theatre.

raybradley
raybradley on March 28, 2011 at 8:07 am

A tinted picture of the Bijou Theatre can be seen on below link, type in
“bricktown main street east broadway"
View link

raybradley
raybradley on March 25, 2011 at 8:57 am

Taken in the early 1920s, this book cover image shows the already shuttered Bijou (AKA-Strand) Theatre (lower photo right). By then it had become some sort of business named New Bamboo, and its roof sign was being used to advertise a product called Cooks.
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seymourcox
seymourcox on July 17, 2010 at 2:08 pm

Postcard view of the old Bijou Theatre can be found on this site,
http://www.roadsideoklahoma.com/node/571

raybradley
raybradley on June 4, 2007 at 9:45 am

Further research uncover facts about the Bijou Thetre. It was sat on Main just East of Broadway.
On May 19, 1915, the Strand Theatre opened inside the former Bijou. Grand opera stage productions moved in on Oct. 28, 1917. Motion pictures returned in March, 1918, and lasted until the house closed forever in early 1920.

jchapman1
jchapman1 on April 30, 2007 at 11:54 am

Bijou Theatre newspaper ads did give this vaudeville house a big build up. So, after I finally located a period postcard* view it came as quite a surprise to see just how modest the Bijou actually was. Located on the Northside of Main Street, about 50 yards East of Broadway, the Bijou facade was only a pink wood frame structure with an electric sign. Hopefully the auditorium upheld high expectation.

*postcard plate 9 from “THE VANISHED SPLENDOR, Postcard Views of Oklahoma City”, by Jim Edwards & Hal Ottaway

raybradley
raybradley on April 9, 2007 at 6:56 am

Perhaps Bijou angels thought OKC’s entertainment district was going to grow East of the elevated tracks. It is only now doing so, a hundred years too late for the Bijou. Take a shorter route to the above mentioned L of C 1910 image,
View link

missmelbatoast
missmelbatoast on April 1, 2007 at 12:13 pm

This ancient vaudeville house is intrigueing. If located at 29 East Main Street as those 1906 news notices say, that would explain the ads supporting unionized labor. At that location the Bijou Theatre Building is still standing today, covered over by a vaneer of perforated sheet metal. See a satellite view from the map feature above.
If it actually sat on West Main, it has been torn down. This old postcard shows where it would have been located at 29 W. Main, in the building above the letter K in the word Kingkade,
View link

seymourcox
seymourcox on March 31, 2007 at 2:32 pm

1906 pre-opening newspapaer announcements and ads list the Bijou Theatre as located at 29 East Main Street. If the Bijou truly was located on East Main, then it was placed in the middle of a warehouse district, which would certainly explain its failure.
Below is a 1910 panaramic photo of Oklahoma City, from Library of Congress. The Bijou Theatre would have been photo center, just this side of the Uneeda Biscuit warehouse.
View link

raybradley
raybradley on March 26, 2007 at 5:31 am

Located on Sheridan (nee-Grand) Ave. & Harvey St. the Bijou Airdome was a sister house to the Bijou Theatre. The Bijou Airdome opened on May 13, 1906, as a rooftop, summer theatre. Advertisements show it was a two a day vaudeville venue.
Use the free search option of this web site to access further details,
http://www.newsok.com/theoklahoman/archives/