Capitol Theater

525 Wylie Avenue,
Pittsburgh, PA 15219

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dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters on August 8, 2022 at 6:52 am

This was a venue designed by architect Harry S. Bair in 1912. It was a building whose origin was in city improvement - the Wylie trolley car street line which led to a razing of selected buildings in a block of properties between Fifth and Sixth Avenue. This 7-story venue housed offices and businesses serving as a replacement for the demolished structures. The Verdi Theatre was the first name of the movie house appealing to Italian immigrants. A neighboring confectionery served as the de facto concession stand. In March of 1919, the Verdi improved presentations with two new Simplex projectors.

Joseph Goldhammer took on the venue in the 1920s renaming it as the Capitol Theater which appears to have faded prior to equipping for sound. The Capitol marketed toward its present audience base now a solidly African American neighborhood though not turning away anyone who frequented the Verdi. The building is an amazing source of vice which includes multiple busts for numbers rackets / illegal lotteries, illegal poker games, stabbings and at least one murder. The theater appears to have gone into receivership in 1926. The entire building was razed after a salvage sale in 1938.