Uptown Theatre, Chicago, 2005. Based on the size of its footprint, the Uptown Theatre in Chicago is reputed to be the largest movie palace in the United States.
Movie palace is an American English synonym for movie theater, but nowadays usually used within the USA for the grand cinemas of the 1910s to early 1960s, contrasting with modern multiplexes. In the United Kingdom such cinemas are referred to as picture palaces.
There are three building types in particular which can be subsumed under the label movie palace. First, the ‘standard’ movie palace , with its eclectic and luxurious period-revival architecture; second, the atmospheric theatre with its fantasy environments fashioned after ‘exotic’ cultures, and finally, the Art Deco theaters that became popular in the 1930s.
[edit] History
- See also: Atmospheric theatre
Grand vaudeville theatres began to show motion pictures in the early 20th century, but the development of the feature film led to the development of dedicated movie theatres. The Mark Strand Theater in New York City, opened in 1913 by Mitchell Mark at the cost of one-million dollars, is usually cited as the first movie palace of the United States, and its success in drawing the upper middle class to the movies spurred others to follow suit.
Many movie palace architects, like studio heads, were often first generation Americans, notably John Eberson, Thomas W. Lamb, and the impresario S.L. "Roxy" Rothafel. Other pioneers include the Chicago firm of Rapp and Rapp, which designed the Chicago Theatre, the Uptown, and the Oriental, and Sid Grauman, who built the first movie palace on the West Coast, Los Angeles' "Million Dollar Theater," in 1918.
As their name implies, movie palaces, like other products of the age, were advertised to "make the average citizen feel like royalty." While inscribed with democratic sayings and patriotic imagery, they consciously referenced the grandeur of aristocratic Europe and were often decorated in European fashion.[1]
Eberson specialized in the subgenre of "atmospheric" theatres. His first, of the five hundred in his career, was the 1923 Majestic in Houston, Texas. The atmospherics usually conveyed the impression of sitting in an outdoor courtyard, surrounded by highly ornamented asymmetrical facades and exotic flora and fauna, underneath a dark blue canopy; when the lights went out, the Brenograph magic lantern machine would begin to project clouds, constellations, and special celestial effects and illusions on the ceiling.
Lamb's theatre style was based on the more straightforward, 'hardtop' form patterned on opera houses, but no less ornate. Some of these theatres were ornamented to a ridiculous extent, in a kitchen-sink exoticism where referenced visual styles wildly collided with each other: church Gothic, Moroccan, Mediterranean, Spanish Gothic, Hindu, Babylonian, Aztec, Mayan, Orientalist, Italian Renaissance, and (after the discovery of King Tut's tomb in 1922) Egyptian Revival, all mixed, matched, and bastardized. This wealth of ornament was not merely for aesthetic effect. It was calculated social engineering, distraction, and traffic management, meant to work on human bodies and minds in a specific way. Today, most of these movie palaces operate as regular theaters, showcasing plays and operas.
[edit] Image Gallery
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Broadway Theatre, Mount Pleasant, Michigan
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[edit] List of movie palaces
This is a list of selected movie palaces, with location and year of construction.
- Alabama Theatre, Birmingham, Alabama, 1927
- Arlington Theater, Santa Barbara, California, 1931
- Alex Theatre, Glendale, California, 1925
- Aztec On The River Theatre, San Antonio, Texas, 1926
- Bama Theatre, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, 1938
- Biograph Theater, Chicago, Illinois, 1914
- Broadway Theatre, Mount Pleasant, Michigan, 1920
- Boyd Theatre, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1928
- Byrd Theatre, Richmond, Virginia, 1928
- California Theatre, San Jose, California
- Capitol Cinema, Ottawa, Canada, 1920
- Capitol Theatre, Rome, New York, 1928
- Capitol Theatre, Vancouver, British Columbia, 1921
- Carolina Theatre, Durham, North Carolina, 1926
- Castro Theatre, San Francisco, California, 1922
- Chicago Theatre, Chicago, Illinois, 1921
- Congress Theater, Chicago, Illinois, 1926
- Coronado Theatre, Rockford, Illinois, 1927
- Grauman's Chinese Theatre, Los Angeles, 1927
- Crest Theatre, Sacramento, California, 1912
- Elgin and Winter Garden Theatres, Toronto, Canada, 1913
- Grauman's Egyptian Theatre, Los Angeles, 1922
- El Capitan Theatre, Los Angeles, 1926
- Florida Theatre, Jacksonville, Florida, 1927
- Fox Theatre, Atlanta, Georgia, 1929
- Fox Theatre, Detroit, Michigan, 1928
- Fox Theatre, San Francisco, California,
- Fox Theatre, St. Louis, Missouri, 1929
- Gateway Theatre, Chicago, Illinois, 1930
- Grand Lake Theater, Oakland, California, 1926
- Hawaii Theatre, Honolulu, Hawaii, 1922
- Jefferson Theater, Charlottesville, Virginia, 1912
- Lafayette Theatre, Suffern, New York, 1924
- Landmark Theater, Richmond, 1926
- Landmark Theatre, 1928 (formerly Loew’s State Theatre)
- Lensic Theater, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 1931
- Loew's 175th Street Theater, New York City, 1930
- Loew's Grand Theatre, Atlanta, 1920s
- Loew's Jersey Theater, Jersey City, 1929
- Loew's Kings Theater, Brooklyn, New York, 1929
- Loew's Paradise Theater, The Bronx, New York, 1929
- Loew's Penn Theater, (now Heinz Hall), Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 1927
- Loew's State Palace Theater, New Orleans, Louisiana, 1926
- Loew's Valencia Theater, Queens, New York, 1929
- Los Angeles Theatre, Los Angeles, California
- Mainstreet Theater, Kansas City, Missouri, 1921 (formerly the Empire and the RKO Missouri)
- Martin's Cinerama, Atlanta, Georgia, 1962 (formerly the Tower Theatre)
- Michigan Theater, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1928
- Michigan Theater, Detroit, 1926
- Ohio Theatre, Columbus, Ohio, 1928
- Ohio Theater, Cleveland, Ohio, 1921
- Olympia Theater, Miami, Florida, 1926
- Ouimetoscope, Montreal, Quebec, 1906
- Oriental Theatre, Chicago, 1926
- Oriental Theatre, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 1927
- Orpheum Theatre, Vancouver, British Columbia, 1927
- Palace Theatre, New York, 1931
- Palace Theater, Cleveland, Ohio, 1922
- Palace Theatre, Columbus, Ohio, 1927
- Paramount Theatre, Austin, Minnesota, 1929
- Paramount Theatre, Oakland, California, 1931
- Paramount Theatre, Portland, Oregon, 1928, (now the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall)
- Paramount Theatre 1927
- Peery's Egyptian Theatre, Ogden, Utah, 1924
- Polk Theatre, Lakeland, Florida, 1928
- Pomona Fox Theater, Pomona, California, 1931
- Quo Vadis Entertainment Center, Westland, Michigan, 1966
- Redford Theatre, Detroit, Michigan, 1928
- The Rex, Berkhamsted, England, 1938
- Rockingham Theatre, Reidsville, North Carolina, 1929
- The Roxie, San Francisco, 1909
- Riviera Theater, Chicago, 1918
- Saenger Theatres
- Senator Theatre, Baltimore, Maryland, 1939
- Shea's Performing Arts Center, Buffalo, New York
- Stanley Theater (now Jahovah's Witness Assembly Hall), Jersey City, New Jersey, 1928
- Stanley Theater, (now Benedum Center), Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 1928
- Stanley Theater, Utica, New York, 1928
- Stanley Theatre (now Stanley Industrial Alliance Stage), Vancouver, British Columbia, 1930
- State Theater, Cleveland, Ohio, 1921
- State Theatre Center for the Arts, Uniontown, Pennsylvania 1922
- Tampa Theatre, Tampa, Florida, 1926
- United Artists Theatre, Los Angeles, 1927; now known as Dr. Gene Scott's Los Angeles University Cathedral
- Uptown Theater, Washington, D.C., 1933
- Uptown Theatre, Chicago, 1925
- Uptown Theatre, Toronto, Ontario, 1920
- Warner Grand Theatre, San Pedro, Los Angeles, California, 1931
- Warner Theatre, Erie, Pennsylvania, 1931
- Warnors Theatre, Fresno, California, 1928
- Washoe Theater, Anaconda, Montana, 1931
- Wilshire Theater, Beverly Hills, California, 1930
- Wiltern Theatre, Los Angeles, California, 1930
[edit] References
- ^ [1]
List of fictional theatres
[edit] External links
Página espejo de la Wikipedia
Directorio de Enlaces Directorio dmoz Directorio espejo dmoz Pedro Bernardo
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