Central Theatre
151 Highland Avenue,
Somerville,
MA
02143
151 Highland Avenue,
Somerville,
MA
02143
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The Central Theatre was designed for John Locatelli by architect Frank Bignotti, and opened in November, 1921.
To my knowledge, this corner in Somerville was never called ‘Central Square’.
There is a “Central Square” theatre listed under Somerville in the 1927 Film Daily Yearbook with 1,200 seats, open 6 days/week.
David Guss’s article “Lost Theatres of Somerville”, from the First Quarter 2006 issue of Marquee, the journal of the Theatre Historical Society of America, is now online at View link .
Besides an extensive history, the article also contains many old photos of and advertisements for the various theatres in Somerville.
(This is a 17-page scanned-image PDF, so unfortunately you cannot search or copy the text.)
I talked to the minister of Tabernáculo dos Pentecostais. He said that the church has been in this builidng since 2003, and normally has services on Sunday morning, but didn’t this particular week when I visited. He was unaware that the space used to be either a movie theatre or a rock-climbing gym. It has probably been extensively modified and subdivided since a major fire around 1994 forced the rock gym to leave. I’ll try to stop by again on some other Sunday and have another look.
A Sports Illustrated article from 1990 about Boston Rock Gym, back when they were still in the Central Theatre and the whole concept was still quite novel. It says that this was the first indoor rock-climbing gym east of the Rockies.
From the article: “The four-story building had been a performance theater until the 1950s; from the 35- by 17-foot floor, the four walls of the former fly loft, behind what was the stage, soar upward 40 feet. The three partners couldn’t have asked for a better set for the type of play they had in mind. They spent 2� months converting the structure. There are 17 separate climbing routes up the four brick sides; artificial hand- and footholds are screwed into the surface. Near the top of one is a plywood overhang covered with textured panels, for friction, and also fitted with handholds and footholdsâ€"for experienced climbers. Another wall has a 22-foot section that is kicked-back, or slightly inclined. Compared with the other three in the room, it looks like a downright easy ascent.”
Today at noon I attempted to visit the church, only to find the front door locked up tight. I have no idea whether the congregation actually exists, or celebrates the Sabbath on a day other than Sunday, or what.
The current tenant of the second floor (where I think the theatre was located) appears to be a Portuguese-language church, Tabernáculo dos Pentecostais. I may try to stop in some Sunday morning when services are going on.
On the first floor is an empty storefront (at the corner), a painting company called First Nick, and a laundromat. An Italian social club is in the basement. The building has 16 apartments, 6 entered from Highland Ave. and 10 from Central Street.
According to David Guss’s website Lost Theatres of Somerville, the theatre opened in November 1921 and “operated for nearly forty years”.
I don’t yet know what exact year it closed. I don’t think it was still operating by the 70s (as the Description currently says).
The MGM Theatre Photograph and Report form for the Central Theatre in Somerville has a facade photo taken in May 1941. It had a 2-sided triangle-style marquee. The Report lists the address as 151 Highland Avenue and states that the theatre had been a MGM customer for over 10 years; that it was over 15 years old; was in Fair condition, and had 665 seats on the main floor and 265 in the balcony, total: 930.
Warren – I can tell you that David Guss is himself the man resposible for how incredible the website is – you should have seen the exhibit! It was fascinating.
For photos and additional information on this theatre go to:
http://www.losttheatres.org/theaters.htm
There was a large fire in this building a few years ago, which drove out the recycling center and the rock gym. At one point, people feared it had been so badly damaged that it would have to be torn down. Fortunately, that turned out not to be the case.