Broadway Theatre (41st Street)

This article is about an individual theatre of this name. For theatre district and the collection of 500+ seat theatres in New York City that are referred to as "Broadway", see Broadway theatre.
Broadway Theatre

The Broadway Theatre on the left in 1912, playing Hanky Panky
Address 1445 Broadway
New York City
United States
Construction
Opened March 3, 1888
Closed January 1929
Architect J.B. McElfatrick & Co.
Advertisement for an adaptation of Mr. Barnes of New York, 1888

The Broadway Theatre near 41st Street was a Manhattan theatre in operation from 1888 to 1929.[1] It was located at 1445 Broadway.

History

James Anthony Bailey, a circus manager and owner (the "Bailey" in Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus) started building the theatre in 1887 on the site of what had been the "Metropolitan Concert Hall" built in 1880. Bailey pulled out, and the project was completed by Frank Sanger, T.H. French, and E. Zborowski, with seating for about 1,800 and standing room for 500 more.[1] The American premiere of La Tosca was performed on the theatre's opening night, March 3, 1888, featuring Fanny Davenport. It was not a great success, due in part to the Great Blizzard of 1888 hitting New York ten days later, and it closed on April 28.[2]

The first successful run was Little Lord Fauntleroy, with the title role alternately played by Elsie Leslie and Tommy Russell, which hit 100 showings on March 21, 1889.[1] Lawrence Barrett's final performance was at the theatre in March 1891, when he became ill during a performance of Richelieu. Edwin Booth's last New York performance occurred at the theatre that same month. El Capitan, John Philip Sousa's most enduring operetta, opened here in 1896 before tours, revivals and a successful London run.[3] The highly successful Ben-Hur debuted in November 1899, the greatest production which the theatre ever hosted.[1] Mrs. Leslie Carter, who later obtained fame with The Heart of Maryland, made her stage debut at the Broadway Theatre in 1890 in The Ugly Duckling.

Starting around 1903, the theatre featured almost all musical productions. In 1913, after the closing of The American Maid, the theatre was used for vaudeville and motion picture shows.

Demise

The last performance was a vaudeville show called Broadway Fever in January 1929, and the theatre was soon after demolished.[1][4][5] The site is now occupied by the 33-story Bricken-Textile Building, built in 1929.[6]

In 1930, the former Colony Theatre on 53rd Street was renamed the Broadway Theatre, which name it still retains.

Notable productions

References

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