Ridgewood Theatre
55-27 Myrtle Avenue,
Ridgewood,
NY
11385
55-27 Myrtle Avenue,
Ridgewood,
NY
11385
31 people favorited this theater
Showing 1,251 - 1,275 of 2,835 comments
From ‘Tonino’s post, the Deutsches Theater appeared to have started as a live theater, because a German theatrical company, direction, casting, and play selection are mentioned.
22 Grove Street is in the Bushwick section of Brooklyn, between Broadway and Bushwick Avenue, and near the intersection of Grove Street and Goodwin Place, which is parallel to and between Bway and Bushwick Avenue, extending from Grove Street to Greene Avenue.
In 1927 there were many people of German descent in Bushwick as well as Ridgewood, such as my father and his family.
Has a page been started on Cinema Treasures for this theater yet ?
Hey guys, I think I may have discovered a new theater, The Deutsches Theater at 22 Grove St (Ridgewood I presume, by its name)
GERMAN REPERTORY THEATRE STARTED IN GROVE STREET
New York Times (1857-Current file). New York, N.Y.: Oct 16, 1927. pg. X3, 1 pgs
Abstract (Summary)
IN the little theatre in Grove Street, where not so long ago “The Manhatters” and “The Band Fox Follies” were doing their stuff, a German theatrical company is now definitely established. It is the Deutsches Theatre, 22 Grove Street, incorporated in the State of New York as the Erni Belian Theatre, Inc., with direction, casting and play selection all under the management of Miss Belian.
Savoy, Jamaica, and the 3rd is Fox’s Folly theater at Graham & D…. St.
It is not the elusive Ridgewood Folly, unless that was also a Fox theater.
I haven’t looked yet. I’ve been trying to find an interior photo of the Ridgewood for us.
You may enjoy browsing that 11/27 page as it contains a lot of ads for other theaters. Problem with postin a jpg of this type is that you can’t magnify it much before it gets bad jaggies.
It was an ad by Fox for its 10 theaters in Manhattan and Brooklyn.
See as well as Hear Fox Movietone Newsreel at the Ridgewood. [NYT display ad 11/24/27]
Shalom, ciao, and excelsior
Display ad May 13, 1923 which I described yesterday. …………..
………Elmer Clifton’s Down to the Sea In Ships.
Shalom, ciao, and excelsior
Bway, I don’t have that long-awaited historic photo of the interior of the Ridgewood theater to post here, but, to the best of my recollection, the auditorium part of the Ridgewood Theater, from where you can see and hear the film or show : the orchestra, loge, (side boxes) and balcony seats, and the proscenium arch, stage and screen, were pretty much as they were in the RKO Madison Theater. The Ridgewood as a single theater had about 2/3 the seats that the RKO Madison did. Taking the square root of 2/3 to get the ratio of linear dimensions, I estimate the linear dimensions of the auditorium part of the Ridgewood Theater, as a single theater, to have been about 4/5 of that of the RKO Madison Theater.
The main difference I recall between the Madison and the Ridgewood in terms of the appearance of the inside would be in the inner lobby. Whereas the inner lobby of the Madison had a high ceiling in common with the balcony, the inner lobby of the Ridgewood had a lower, one-story ceiling, except near the staircase up to the balcony. Upon entering, and having your ticket taken and torn in two, one would turn 45 degrees to the left and would then be facing the side wall on Madison Street. To one’s right would be the orchestra seating. To one’s left would be the refreshment counter and, further ahead, the staircase up to the balcony. Further ahead, past that staircase, the doors to the restrooms would be on the left, with more access to the orchestra seating on the right.
The balcony lobby was large and elliptical in shape. I got my last look at it on Tuesday June 17 1980. On one side was a refreshment counter, and on the other side were the doorways to the balcony seats. At each end must have been the entrance and exit stairways. The longer, or major, axis of the ellipse was parallel to the screen.
There were also restrooms on the balcony level.
Wow, when I saw “photo”, I was think there may actually be a long awaited historic photo of the interior of the Ridgewood theater found….
Warren, I wasn’t sure of that. That’s why I included a description. Two pictures in the ad: one a dory w sailors and a whale’s fluke above the boat; the other of some of the actors
Shalom. ciao, and excelsior
Hey Rollo,
That should be Elmer Clifton, NOT Edgar.
Shalom. ciao, and excelsior
Edgar Clifton’s Down to the Sea In Ships. Very nice display ad from the 5/23/1923 NYT of “The most sensational photoplay of this year which can be seen at thirty leading theaters”, including The Ridgewood.
Yes, Lost Memory, unlike the Ridgewood, with its two floors above the entrance.
Yes, they are.
That’s true, Lost Memory, but what about those one or two little stores in the RKO Madison building ?
You’re welcome, frankie. If I think of any more reasons why I think the Ridgewood has remained open and is still showing movies, I will post them here.
Thank you, gentlemen, these are all good reasons, and it all makes sense. Hello out there, dear Lost Memory ! Hope you are well & happy !
Thanks, Lost Memory. That’s as good an explanation as any as to why the Ridgewood has remained open to this day. I still can’t think of any more reasons besides what I’ve already posted.
Why does someone without time or patience even bother going onto this page ? Why don’t they just go someplace else and leave us alone ? To paraphrase Liz Taylor in “Virginia Woolf”: “My arm is TIRED whipping Warren ” !!!
You’re welcome, Warren. Sorry, that should have been “gee whiz”, not “whix”.
“Who has the time or patience to sift through more than 2,000 comments ?”
Well, gee whix, Warren, YOU must have, else how would you know that at least 1500 were “off-topic” ?!?!?!
Good to read you again on this page, frankie …. or any CT page, for that matter … and thanks for getting us centrally back on topic here …. four weeks ago tomorrow that you and I and Bklyn Jim met at the Ridgewood ….
Exactly WHAT has saved the Ridgewood ???? That’s the $ 64 million dollar question …. It’s still showing movies because it has continued to make money doing so … but that merely begs the question … perhaps the ever-increasing lack of other movie theaters nearby, starting with the closing of smaller nearby neighborhood theaters like the Parthenon, Glenwood, Rivoli, Evergreen, Ritz, Oasis, Grandview, Majestic, Wyckoff, etc. due to TV roughly half a century ago … then the closing and the burning of the RKO Madison, 1977-79, its becoming a store in 1980, combined with the continued demand for a movie theater in Ridgewood, despite TV and a burgeoning home video market. Perhaps the Ridgewood being smaller and less expensive to maintain than the Madison, roughly 2/3 the seating capacity. Perhaps its multiplexing, starting in 1980 …. although that didn’t save the UA Astoria from becoming a Duane Reade. Perhaps the Ridgewood’s ideal location on Myrtle Avenue, Ridgewood’s main commercial strip, with the busy Q-55 bus outside, the hub, or “depot”, of B-13, B-18, B-20, B-26, B-38, B-54 and Q-58 bus lines, (did I omit any ?) and the L and M subway lines a few blocks away ? Something in common with Loew’s Plaza Corona and Jackson Theaters, assuming THEY’RE still open and showing movies ?
That’s all I can think of at the moment.
As I was walking up 9th Street in Park Slope and brooded once again about the fact that my childhood RKO Prospect is now a supermarket, all of a sudden it occurred to me: in the midst of all this thought about the Ridgewood surviving, I wondered, why in all these years has the Ridgewood NOT become a supermarket or a Duane Reade ? What has saved it all these years, when all the other theaters in Brooklyn have fallen by the wayside ? Exactly what IS it that has saved the Ridgewood; especially in the face of low attendance ? Food for thought. What think you, gentlemen ?
Ridgewood Theater … 2146 comments, and still going strong !!!!