historic Los Angeles movie theater

Old movie and vaudeville theaters making a comeback in downtown Los Angeles

Roxie, Cameo and Arcade theaters on Broadway Los Angeles
7th and Broadway was, back in the early 20th century, the heart of Los Angeles. Grand theaters, like the Roxie, Cameo and Arcade, and elegant department stores lined the streets. By the late 1960s, this part of the city was essentially abandoned when everyone went off to live in the ‘burbs..  Within the last 5 years, it has become very hip to live in downtown. Today it is a mix of grungy and too cool.

I had taken two of the eight Los Angeles Conservancy guided walking tours already: The Victorian homes tour in Angelino Heights and the Art Deco buildings walk in downtown L.A.  I learned a lot about both styles of architecture and how they fit into the history of Los Angeles, so I was really looking forward to the Broadway Theatre walking tour on Saturday morning.  Imagine my dismay when our tour leader announced, as we were leaving Pershing Square where the tours begin, that he didn’t know much about architecture.  And, sadly, he went on the prove it during this 3 hour walk along Broadway. But he did know a lot about the theater people in old Los Angeles.

detail movie theater on Broadway Los Angeles
An architectural detail in one of the theaters. You won’t find things like that at the local multiplex.

Apparently the Broadway Theater walking tour is geared more toward tourists, like the 3 young Polish women in our group–rather than locals interested in architecture and the revitalization of the old heart of L.A.  Instead of learning about building styles, we heard tales of performers and owners of a dozen old vaudeville and movie theaters.

It turned out that our tour leader was the son of a theater manager, starting back in the 1920s.  By the 1950s, his father was the head of advertising for the Metropolitan theater chain and on Saturday mornings would bring his son to the Orpheum Theater to watch movies while Dad worked in his office upstairs. Fast forward 65 years later: every time  our leader revisits the Orpheum, he takes a trip down memory lane.

He also told tales of Charlies Chaplin, Milton Berle and Jack Benny.  Benny met his wife who worked at the May Company department store across the street from the Orpheum while on a break between performances.  And perhaps the most scandalous story: Alex Pantages the owner of a major chain of vaudeville theaters, as an old man in the mid 1920s, was convicted of raping an usher in one of his theaters.  The sentence: 50 years in prison.  On appeal the decision was reversed, and he promptly sold his theater to Jack Warner, of Warner Brothers movies fame.  Pantages died 3 years later.

While these stories stuck in my mind, the theaters did not. 14 movie houses in 3 hours is too much.  They all began to blur together.

Los Angeles Theater on Broadway
We did not see the interior of the The Los Angeles theater, but were told that it was modeled on Versailles. It is still frequently used for performances of various types.
box seats at Orpheum theater Los Angeles
Box seats at the Orpheum.
Seats at Orpheum theater downtown L.A.
As these seats at the Orpheum theater indicate, it has been restored and maintained. There are 200 performances of one kind or the other in the theater every year.
Lobby ceiling Orpheum theater
The ceiling of the lobby at the Orpheum. Everything has been restored to original condition.
Urban Outfitters in the Rialto theater
Once it was the Rialto Theater. Now it is Urban Outfitters. It was the only theater with its marquee lights on.  I love the banner on the lightpost in front announcing the Bill Graham exhibition at a local museum.  Graham was the most important rock music promoter back in the 1960s.  “Everything old is new again.”