Ozark Jubilee was mentioned in the February 19, 1955, issue of The Billboard. The show had been airing from the studios of the University of Missouri at Columbia, but was scheduled to return to the refurbished Jewell Theatre about April 1.
A movie house called the Savoy was in operation at Park Falls as early as 1908. That year, the December 26 issue of The Moving Picture World ran the following item about it:
“Park Falls, Wis.—The Savoy Theater, which was recently opened under the management of Jones & Murry, is now conducted by Mr. Jones, who purchased his partner’s interest in the business.”
At some point, the old building on the corner had some of its upper floors removed. That’s where the destruction wall came from. And of course the theater would have to have been been wider than the office building, in order to accommodate so many seats. A comparatively narrow building for a theater’s entrance and a wider lot behind for the auditorium was common in neighborhoods such as Midtown, where frontage on the Avenues was very expensive and land on the side streets was considerably cheaper.
In the 1948 photo, the advertisement for Buitoni spaghetti covers the facade of the same seven story building that is seen in the 1920 photo. The 1948 Gillette razor ad is on the same corner building that is seen in the 1920 photo. The triple-bay of the Keith-Albee office tower rises higher than the advertising signs of the adjacent buildings.
In this 1962 photo, the corner building is still there, the framework for the advertising sign still atop it, but the sign itself is gone. It’s the same building that was there in 1920. Mike, bigjoe59, and I are not the ones being fooled by the false facades. The Keith-Albee building is three bays wide in every picture except the one in the 1928 souvenir booklet. The logical conclusion is that the additional bays shown in that picture were drawn in, but were never built.
Google Maps misplaced its pin icon by a mile or so again. I’ve moved Street View to the proper location. The Avon Theatre building is easily recognizable, as the marquee and vertical sign are still intact. The building now houses an antiques shop. Go to the Life Theatre page to see the proper block on a map. The Avon was across the street and a few doors south from the Life.
For some reason, the Life and Town Theatres are not appearing in the “Nearby Theaters” field on this page. Probably something to do with Google Maps being screwy again.
This building appears to have been almost universally detested, judging from the plethora of attacks on it to be found on the Internet. This article from 2005, for example, tells of a television show which voted the Sheridan IMAX the worst building in England. All I can say to that is… if only.
I’ll own that the building was not very appealing, at least judging from its Google Street View, and it was surely inappropriately sited, but the worst building in England? That’s an awful lot of buildings and a lot of awful buildings. Somebody standing on the Sheridan’s roof with a hand-held rocket launcher could probably have taken out half a dozen or more that I’d consider even worse right there in Bournemouth— but there’s no accounting for tastes, I suppose. I’d trade our bland local multiplex for something that looked more like the Sheridan any day.
Wikipedia has this photo of the Palace dated circa 1920, and the building is certainly narrower than it is in the picture in the 1928 Souvenir booklet.
The extra bays are also missing from the building in this 1948 photo. My guess would be that the addition of the side wings was proposed, but the expansion was never carried out. Vaudeville began to decline soon after the arrival of talking pictures, and that event was soon followed by the depression, further reducing the demand for live performers. The building housed the booking offices of the Keith-Albee-Orpheum vaudeville circuit, and a rapidly shrinking staff would have needed no additional space.
Arcadia Publishing Company has an entire book devoted to the World Theatre, part of its “Images of America” series.
The World opened on November 14, 1927. The opening program included vaudeville acts, the feature film Adam and Evil, and an Our Gang comedy short. There was also music from the theater’s Marr & Colton organ. The theater was designed by architect James T. Allen, who had designed the Roseland Theatre in Omaha a few years earlier.
The recent renovation of the World Theatre was designed by architect Philip Cudaback of Lahaina Architects.
The L.A. Live complex as a whole, including the exterior of the Regal Cinemas, was designed by Gensler & Associates, but the theater interior is the work of Blair Ballard Architects.
Yakima had a house called the Yakima Theatre as early as 1907, when it was mentioned in a book published that year, The Coast, by Honor H. Wilhelm. The Yakima Theatre was also mentioned in the August 26, 1916, issue of The Moving Picture World.
As the building housing the Yakima Theatre in the 1931 photo looks to have been built in the late 19th or early 20th century, possibly the 1931 opening was a re-opening under new ownership, though it’s possible that it was an entirely different Yakima Theatre, but was located in an old building converted from some other use.
In his book The Death of Black Radio, Bernie J. Hayes says that for over a year around 1966-1967 he operated the Pageant Theatre, under a lease from the Arthur brothers, as a concert venue for R&B acts.
Although the old Pageant Theatre is gone, its name lives on in The Pageant, a modern concert venue opened at 6161 Delmar Boulevard in 2000.
cdrosenblatt: As the house was equipped for Todd-AO, the Pageant might have had the Saint Louis premier of Around the World in 80 Days, but the world premier was at the Rivoli Theatre in New York City on October 17, 1956. The movie opened in Los Angeles on December 22, at the Carthay Circle Theatre. It probably would not have reached St. Louis until after it opened in Los Angeles, so if the Pageant ran it, it might not have shown there until early 1957.
The Thursday, August 11, 1927, issue of the Fairport Herald-Mail said that the Temple Theatre would open the following night. The article confirms Michael DeAngelis as the architect, but claims the style to be Italian Renaissance. An accompanying photo of the theater’s front doesn’t look especially Italian or French to me, but seems vaguely Spanish.
In any case, the current Colonial Revival front is clearly the result of a much later alteration, perhaps done even after the theater had been closed.
The Temple Theatre had been dark for several months according the the April 28, 1958, issue of the Fairport Herald-Mail. The theater was scheduled to be auctioned off on May 19.
Here is a brief article from the October 18, 1919, issue of the weekly journal The Music Trades:
“Boston Theatre Buys a Morton
“BOSTON, MASS., Oct. 14.
“George Lincoln Parker, the Boylston Street piano merchant and resident representative of the American Photoplayer Co., succeeded a few days ago in securing an important contract, after the keenest competition for an organ to be installed in the city’s latest, largest and most attractive moving picture house.
“The Robert Morton Symphonic organ, as constructed by the American Photoplayer Company, at its modernly appointed factory in Berkely, Cal., will grace the Powers Broadway Theatre, South Boston, on or about February 1, 1920. This picture playhouse is at present in process of construction and the same contractor who delivered Camp Devens in Ayer, Mass., to the government will spare neither time nor money to have the theatre complete on contract time.
“The Robert Morton Symphonic organ both in tone and construction will feature the interior’s furnishings where music lovers and theatre goers are promised a revelation when the organ is heard amidst the costliest and most artistic theatre appointments. The organ, when completed and installed, will be the best and most expensive instrument ever installed in the city’s long list of theaters.”
Photos and floor plans of the Broadway Theatre were published in the June 8, 1921, issue of The American Architect, which can be seen online here. Scroll down to see additional photos. They can be resized using the + and – signs in the toolbar at lower right, and individual pages of the size you’ve chosen can then be downloaded with the usual right click-save commands.
The Nickelodeon Theatre was mentioned in the Boston Police Departments records for 1919:
“On the application of A. L. Wolffe, Manager, Fred E.
Hanscom was appointed a Special Police Officer for duty in and about the premises of the Nickelodeon Theatre located at 51 Hanover street for the year ending March 31, 1920.”
Ozark Jubilee was mentioned in the February 19, 1955, issue of The Billboard. The show had been airing from the studios of the University of Missouri at Columbia, but was scheduled to return to the refurbished Jewell Theatre about April 1.
A movie house called the Savoy was in operation at Park Falls as early as 1908. That year, the December 26 issue of The Moving Picture World ran the following item about it:
At some point, the old building on the corner had some of its upper floors removed. That’s where the destruction wall came from. And of course the theater would have to have been been wider than the office building, in order to accommodate so many seats. A comparatively narrow building for a theater’s entrance and a wider lot behind for the auditorium was common in neighborhoods such as Midtown, where frontage on the Avenues was very expensive and land on the side streets was considerably cheaper.
In the 1948 photo, the advertisement for Buitoni spaghetti covers the facade of the same seven story building that is seen in the 1920 photo. The 1948 Gillette razor ad is on the same corner building that is seen in the 1920 photo. The triple-bay of the Keith-Albee office tower rises higher than the advertising signs of the adjacent buildings.
In this 1962 photo, the corner building is still there, the framework for the advertising sign still atop it, but the sign itself is gone. It’s the same building that was there in 1920. Mike, bigjoe59, and I are not the ones being fooled by the false facades. The Keith-Albee building is three bays wide in every picture except the one in the 1928 souvenir booklet. The logical conclusion is that the additional bays shown in that picture were drawn in, but were never built.
Google Maps misplaced its pin icon by a mile or so again. I’ve moved Street View to the proper location. The Avon Theatre building is easily recognizable, as the marquee and vertical sign are still intact. The building now houses an antiques shop. Go to the Life Theatre page to see the proper block on a map. The Avon was across the street and a few doors south from the Life.
For some reason, the Life and Town Theatres are not appearing in the “Nearby Theaters” field on this page. Probably something to do with Google Maps being screwy again.
Here is the official web site.
In the description and previous names field, the name should be spelled Philip, not Phillip.
Santa: The Town Theatre was a different house, and has its own Cinema Treasures page here.
This building appears to have been almost universally detested, judging from the plethora of attacks on it to be found on the Internet. This article from 2005, for example, tells of a television show which voted the Sheridan IMAX the worst building in England. All I can say to that is… if only.
I’ll own that the building was not very appealing, at least judging from its Google Street View, and it was surely inappropriately sited, but the worst building in England? That’s an awful lot of buildings and a lot of awful buildings. Somebody standing on the Sheridan’s roof with a hand-held rocket launcher could probably have taken out half a dozen or more that I’d consider even worse right there in Bournemouth— but there’s no accounting for tastes, I suppose. I’d trade our bland local multiplex for something that looked more like the Sheridan any day.
Wikipedia has this photo of the Palace dated circa 1920, and the building is certainly narrower than it is in the picture in the 1928 Souvenir booklet.
The extra bays are also missing from the building in this 1948 photo. My guess would be that the addition of the side wings was proposed, but the expansion was never carried out. Vaudeville began to decline soon after the arrival of talking pictures, and that event was soon followed by the depression, further reducing the demand for live performers. The building housed the booking offices of the Keith-Albee-Orpheum vaudeville circuit, and a rapidly shrinking staff would have needed no additional space.
Arcadia Publishing Company has an entire book devoted to the World Theatre, part of its “Images of America” series.
The World opened on November 14, 1927. The opening program included vaudeville acts, the feature film Adam and Evil, and an Our Gang comedy short. There was also music from the theater’s Marr & Colton organ. The theater was designed by architect James T. Allen, who had designed the Roseland Theatre in Omaha a few years earlier.
The recent renovation of the World Theatre was designed by architect Philip Cudaback of Lahaina Architects.
The L.A. Live complex as a whole, including the exterior of the Regal Cinemas, was designed by Gensler & Associates, but the theater interior is the work of Blair Ballard Architects.
The Galaxy Tulare 10 was designed by the Laguna Beach, California, firm Blair Ballard Architects. There are four photos at the firm’s web site.
Yakima had a house called the Yakima Theatre as early as 1907, when it was mentioned in a book published that year, The Coast, by Honor H. Wilhelm. The Yakima Theatre was also mentioned in the August 26, 1916, issue of The Moving Picture World.
As the building housing the Yakima Theatre in the 1931 photo looks to have been built in the late 19th or early 20th century, possibly the 1931 opening was a re-opening under new ownership, though it’s possible that it was an entirely different Yakima Theatre, but was located in an old building converted from some other use.
In his book The Death of Black Radio, Bernie J. Hayes says that for over a year around 1966-1967 he operated the Pageant Theatre, under a lease from the Arthur brothers, as a concert venue for R&B acts.
Although the old Pageant Theatre is gone, its name lives on in The Pageant, a modern concert venue opened at 6161 Delmar Boulevard in 2000.
cdrosenblatt: As the house was equipped for Todd-AO, the Pageant might have had the Saint Louis premier of Around the World in 80 Days, but the world premier was at the Rivoli Theatre in New York City on October 17, 1956. The movie opened in Los Angeles on December 22, at the Carthay Circle Theatre. It probably would not have reached St. Louis until after it opened in Los Angeles, so if the Pageant ran it, it might not have shown there until early 1957.
The Thursday, August 11, 1927, issue of the Fairport Herald-Mail said that the Temple Theatre would open the following night. The article confirms Michael DeAngelis as the architect, but claims the style to be Italian Renaissance. An accompanying photo of the theater’s front doesn’t look especially Italian or French to me, but seems vaguely Spanish.
In any case, the current Colonial Revival front is clearly the result of a much later alteration, perhaps done even after the theater had been closed.
Here is a link to the Google Documents version of the page.
The Temple Theatre had been dark for several months according the the April 28, 1958, issue of the Fairport Herald-Mail. The theater was scheduled to be auctioned off on May 19.
Here is a brief article from the October 18, 1919, issue of the weekly journal The Music Trades:
Photos and floor plans of the Broadway Theatre were published in the June 8, 1921, issue of The American Architect, which can be seen online here. Scroll down to see additional photos. They can be resized using the + and – signs in the toolbar at lower right, and individual pages of the size you’ve chosen can then be downloaded with the usual right click-save commands.The Nickelodeon Theatre was mentioned in the Boston Police Departments records for 1919:
Harkins Tucson Spectrum 18 is one of several multiplexes designed for the chain by The Beck Group, a Dallas, Texas architectural firm.
Harkins Northfield 18 is one of several multiplexes designed for the chain by The Beck Group, a Dallas, Texas architectural firm.
Harkins Southlake 14 is one of several multiplexes designed for the chain by The Beck Group, a Dallas, Texas architectural firm.
Harkins Moreno Valley 16 is one of several multiplexes designed for the chain by The Beck Group, a Dallas, Texas architectural firm.
Harkins Chino Hills 18 is one of several multiplexes designed for the chain by The Beck Group, a Dallas, Texas architectural firm.
The Harkins Casa Grande 14 is one of several multiplexes designed for the chain by The Beck Group, a Dallas, Texas architectural firm.