Palais Royale

Palais Royale

Palais Royale is a dance hall at the foot of Roncesvalles Avenue in Toronto, Ontario Canada on Lake Ontario. Originally built as a boat works, it became notable as a night club in the now-defunct Sunnyside Amusement Park, hosting many prominent 'big band' jazz bands. Since the Park's demolition, the building has ceased to be a nightclub, being used for special occasions and concerts. It has recently been remodeled and is in use for special occasions and meetings.

History

In the 1900s and 1910s, the Sunnyside area was undeveloped except for a few waterfront uses. One waterfront business was Dean's Boat House, building canoes, renting boats and providing local boat cruises, located on Lakeshore Road at Queen Street, south-east of High Park. Starting in the 1910s, the waterfront was redeveloped by the Toronto Harbour Commission and all of the waterfront buildings were removed. The waterfront was extended to the south and new buildings were constructed to replace those removed.

The new Dean’s Sunnyside Pleasure Boats, a canoe boat-building factory and a supplier to the local Parkdale canoe club was opened in 1922 as part of the new Sunnyside Beach. The new building was designed by the architectural firm of Chapman, Oxley & Bishop, architects who designed the Sunnyside Bathing Pavilion, which opened that same year nearby. The boat-building activities occupied the basement and part of the first floor, which was at shoreline level. The second floor, at ground level from the front, became a dance hall. Although Dean’s Pleasure Boats was successful for some time, it eventually went out of business and the Palais became a dance hall only. [Filey (1981), p. 62-63 ]

In 1932 Bill Cuthbert and George Deller took over the Palais Royale and this was the period of its greatest popularity. 'Big bands' such as Duke Ellington and Count Basie, Paul Whiteman and the Dorsey Brothers played there. [ Toronto Historical Board Plaque, 1985 ] The largest audience was in 1933, when 3000 people danced to Eddie Duchin's Park Central Orchestra from New York. From 1933 to 1950, Bert Niosi "Canada's King of Swing" and his orchestra were the house band.

Admission was 10 cents plus five cents a dance. Only soft drinks were available and certain dances, such as the jitterbug, were forbidden as they were considered too risqué. Dances were held six nights a week (dancing was not allowed on Sundays).

The land on which the Palais Royale was built was originally leased from the Toronto Harbour Commission in 1922 for 21 years. Cuthbert and Deller renewed the lease in 1944 for another 21 years. [ 1944 lease, Toronto Harbour Commission Archives RG12/3/3950 ] . They sold their rights to Joe Broderick in 1949. Broderick operated the facility as a dance hall from 1949 to 1966.

1955–present: After the Amusement Park

In 1955, Sunnyside Amusement Park was demolished for the Gardiner Expressway and Lakeshore Boulevard expansions. In the period 1956-1959 the hall lost money, but Broderick was showing profits again by 1964. [ Joe Broderick to George A Wilson, Toronto Harbour Commission, September 28, 1964, Toronto Harbour Commission Archives, RG313, Box 363, Folder 17 ] . Broderick attempted to negotiate a further lease in 1965 but he was not successful and he sold his rights to the Polish National Union in January 1966. By this time the land had been transferred to the City of Toronto, which had placed the Palais Royale on its list of properties for demolition in 1965. It was then that the City removed the hall's east-side parking lot, formerly the mini-golf course, planting grass and willow trees. However, instead of being demolished, the property was instead designated as a historic site by the City in 1974. [ City of Toronto Minutes 1982, Appendix A, page 523]

Since then, the hall has been used for concerts by a diverse range of musicians. From The Specials, Joe Jackson and Rough Trade around 1980 to concerts by Blur, Blue Rodeo, Sigur Rós, Echo And The Bunnymen, The Sadies, Constantines, Sloan and a The Rolling Stones concert on August 16, 2002. [ [http://www.chartattack.com/damn/2006/06/0507.cfm Chart Attack article on Palais reopening] ] The building was a film location for the 1990 film "Queen of Mean".

On June 18, 1986, the City of Toronto attempted to buy out the lease for the Palais Royale for $82,500, the price at which the property was valued in 1944. The Polish National Union claimed it had spent $236,697 on repairs to the building and refused the offer. [ City of Toronto Minutes, 1987, Executive Committee Report no. 8, pg. 4521 ] In June 1987 the City began legal action to retain control of the property, a process which ended with a decision by the Ontario Court of Appeal on March 28, 1994 which terminated the lease on April 16, 1999. [ City of Toronto Minutes, 1994, Executive Committee Report 13, pg. 45 ]

The Property was leased to Shoreline Entertainment in 2000, on the condition that repairs and renovations be made to the hall. Shoreline transferred the lease to the Pegasus Group in 2005 [ [http://www.toronto.ca/legdocs/2005/agendas/committees/te/te050705/it016.pdf Toronto Staff Report, May 18, 2005] ] . The Group spent $3.5 million on renovations, gutting the interior, replacing the windows and rebuilding the rear terrace. Described by Den Farnworth of Goldsmith Borgal Architects as "it's not a true restoration, it's more an adaptive reuse", [ [http://www.palaisroyale.ca/torontostar.pdf PDF reprint of Toronto Start article] ] the renovations attracted some controversy.

In September, 2006, the Palais Royale hosted its official Grand Re-Opening, and the house band for the evening was the stellar Toronto All-Star Big Band, composed of young performers from around Ontario. This band is reminiscent of the Goodman, Miller, and Shaw era of swinging dance tunes and is fronted by one of Toronto's finest vocal groups, the TABB-5.

Controversies

Critics of the renovation denounced the new design for its destruction of major architectural elements and inept approximation of historical stylings. Detractors claim the new design uses many contemporary elements which are anachronistic on a building of the Art Deco era. Supporters tout the security of its contemporized design, one more likely to attract paying customers and ensure future maintenance, and ultimately, the existence of the structure.

In addition to the design controversy, a controversy erupted over the restoration of the facility's parking lot, which was removed in 1965 [ City of Toronto Minutes, 1966, Appendix A, Parks and Recreation Report no. 11, pp. 2237-2239 ] and replaced by grass and willow trees, which had grown to mature height in the meantime. Local groups opposed the removal of the trees to repave the parking lot and opposed paving a new parking lot, proposing on-street parking. After public consultations, the City of Toronto has since paved a new parking lot for the hall across the street on former Amusement Park lands between the east and west lanes of Lake Shore Boulevard, and provided a set of stoplights for customers to cross the street to the hall, but preserving the willow trees of the old lot.

Redevelopment plans for the waterfront area include the relocation of Lakeshore Boulevard and the parking lots north, against the Gardiner right-of-way, freeing up park lands along the water.

ee also

* Roncesvalles, Toronto
* Sunnyside, Toronto

References

*

External links

* [http://www.palaisroyale.ca Palais Royale web site]
* [http://www.toronto.ca/archives/becker_collections/images/pc_palais.jpg1926 photo, from City of Toronto web site]
* [http://www.toronto.ca/toronto_images/images/dsc_0053_palroyal.jpgPre-renovation photo, from City of Toronto web site]
* [http://community.iexplore.com/planning/journalEntryActivity.asp?journalID=1937&entryID=6195&n=Palais+Royale+Ballroom Profile on community.iexplore.com]
* [http://www.toronto.com/arts/listing/000-100-175 Profile on Toronto.com]


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