Capitol Theater
1521 Elm Street,
Dallas,
TX
75201
1521 Elm Street,
Dallas,
TX
75201
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BTW, Interstate did NOT open the Capitol, as it says in the introductory remarks, above; although, IIRC, the company did acquire it and the adjacent Rialto (Old Mill) at some time in the lives of these respective theatres.
$50,000 doesn’t sound like a whole lot, esp.compared to the $2,000,000 price tags for the Majestic and Palace, both built the previous year – even considering they were each about 2-3 times the seating capacity.
The Capitol Theatre was designed by architect Bertram C. Hill. This item appeared in the July 13, 1922, issue of Manufacturers Record:
Two photos of the Capitol survive in the collection of Hill’s papers at Southern Methodist University.75050 zipcode in address maps to Carrolton, TX, not Dallas; correct zip is 75201; that’ll get you to the correct block of downtown Dallas. Of course, the entire block of buildings in which the Capitol (and the Old Mill/Rialto, Ritz/Pantages/Mirror, Queen/Leo, and Telenews) sat is long, long gone.
kathy, if you can get a copy of Jeanette Crumpler’s book about Dallas’s downtown movie theaters, “Street of Dreams,” there is an interior shot showing the screen/stage area on page 94.
The exterior is very impressive. Sure wish someone could post some interior shots. I can’t imagine the style is “unknown”.
From the 1930s a postcard view of the Capitol Theater on Theater Row in Dallas.
From 1933, a postcard view of the Capitol Theater on Elm Street in Dallas along with the Mirror, Old Mill and Palace.
A view of the Capitol Theater from 1938 at the world premier of “Under Western Stars” with western stars Roy Rogers and Smiley Burnette in attendance.
A old movie theater ad from 1949 for Capitol Theater.
A vintage postcard view of the Capitol Theater on Elm Street.