Princess Theater: Difference between revisions

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The '''Princess Theater''' was a small playhouse located at 216 [[20th Street North]]. It was built before [[1914]] and operated by the [[Mudd & Colley Amusement Company]], which also operated the [[Rialto Theatre]] and [[Trianon Theatre]]. Documentary photographer [[Lewis Wickes Hine]] took a picture of 12-year old usher [[Brown McDowell]] outside the theater in October [[1914]].
The '''Princess Theater''' was a small playhouse located at 216 [[20th Street North]]. It was built before [[1914]] and operated by the [[Mudd & Colley Amusement Company]], which also operated the [[Rialto Theatre]] and [[Trianon Theatre]]. Documentary photographer [[Lewis Wickes Hine]] took a picture of 12-year old usher [[Brown McDowell]] outside the theater in October [[1914]].


The company sold its assets to the Carl Hoblitzelle circuit in [[1926]]. The Princess remained open through the end of that decade.
The company sold its assets to the Carl Hoblitzelle circuit in January [[1926]]. In June of that year, manager [[E. W. Street]] carried out a publicity stunt for its run of Universal's feature "The Border Sheriff". The front of the theater was transformed into a "wild west" boomtown front with composition board painted in imitation of rough gray boards, a shingled shed porch, and two cacti constructed of bunting stuffed with excelsior, trimmed with rope and toothpick "thorns" and painted green. A sign reading "Boundary Line-Mexico-U.S.A." was painted on the boards, and a notice for a $5,000 reward for a wanted desperado was pasted to a post outside.
 
The Princess remained open through the end of that decade.


{{stub}}
{{stub}}
[[Category:Former theaters]]
==References==
* "Exploit-O-Grams: The Border Sheriff (Universal)" (June 10, 1926) ''The Film Daily'', p. 2
 
[[Category:Former cinemas]]
[[Category:20th Street North]]
[[Category:20th Street North]]

Revision as of 10:03, 27 May 2016

12-year-old usher Brown McDowell outside the Princess Theater in October 1914

The Princess Theater was a small playhouse located at 216 20th Street North. It was built before 1914 and operated by the Mudd & Colley Amusement Company, which also operated the Rialto Theatre and Trianon Theatre. Documentary photographer Lewis Wickes Hine took a picture of 12-year old usher Brown McDowell outside the theater in October 1914.

The company sold its assets to the Carl Hoblitzelle circuit in January 1926. In June of that year, manager E. W. Street carried out a publicity stunt for its run of Universal's feature "The Border Sheriff". The front of the theater was transformed into a "wild west" boomtown front with composition board painted in imitation of rough gray boards, a shingled shed porch, and two cacti constructed of bunting stuffed with excelsior, trimmed with rope and toothpick "thorns" and painted green. A sign reading "Boundary Line-Mexico-U.S.A." was painted on the boards, and a notice for a $5,000 reward for a wanted desperado was pasted to a post outside.

The Princess remained open through the end of that decade.

References

  • "Exploit-O-Grams: The Border Sheriff (Universal)" (June 10, 1926) The Film Daily, p. 2