Trianon Theatre

814 Canal Street,
New Orleans, LA 70112

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dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters on April 30, 2026 at 1:09 pm

The Trianon closed on July 19, 1929 with “The Girl From Chicago.” Saenger additionally closed the Liberty, Strand, Globe and St. Charles due to lack of business plus the cost to wire the theaters. Ultimately, that was the end of the Trianon as it was occupied “as is” by a business until its 1932 conversion in 1932 to a retail building by architects Favrot & Livaudais.

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters on November 12, 2015 at 7:04 am

In the store-show era of movie exhibition, Josiah Pearce & Sons' Pearce’s Theatre Circuit was a leader in New Orleans and Monroe, LA as well. With the two store-show theatres on St. Charles Street (the Bijou Dream Theatre at 117 St. Charles and Dreamland at 316 St. Charles) and two more on Canal St with the Grand Theatre (1033 Canal) and the Electric Theatre (926 Canal), Pearce seem well-situated until larger competitive theaters came along. Pearce answered with its first true modern movie palace with the Trianon encompassing 814-816 Canal Street. A year later, Pearce added the Tudor Theatre at 610 Canal which opened in June of 1913. Pearce would shutter his show-stores leaving the Pearce New Orleans portfolio as the Trianon and the Tudor Theatre at 610 Canal which opened in June of 1913.

But the Pearce Circuit was under duress especially from the Saneger Circuit which would acquire both the Tudor and Trianon. Though the Trianon had good times under Saenger, the circuit got even more aggressive building movie palaces including the Saenger Theatre which rendered the Trianon fairly useless and certainly outdated. It would be dropped and the theater’s auditorium eventually demolished.