- Paramount Theater (New York City)
The Paramount Theater in the
Times Square district ofNew York City was a notedmovie theatre and live performance venue before it was gutted and converted to office and retail space in 1965. The office building housing it, known as the Paramount Building, remains a Times Square landmark.The building
Paramount Pictures , already one of the major American motion picture companies in the 1920s, built its headquarters building in Times Square in 1926, and built this theatre of over 3600 seats behind it to serve as the company's flagship venue, where its major films would be premiered. Company presidentAdolph Zukor had acquired a controlling interest in the Chicago-basedBalaban and Katz theater chain, and with it the services ofSam Katz , who became the head of Paramount's theatre division.Balaban and Katz had a long working relationship with Chicago architectural firm
Rapp and Rapp , which had designed numerous theaters for his company in the Midwest. Paramount hired the Chicago firm to design their new Manhattan flagship and office tower. The Rapps created a thirty-three story office tower which was influenced by theArt Deco style, and a theatre in the palatialNeo-Renaissance style.The theater entrance was marked by a five story arch on Broadway, and a long gallery passed from there through the office building to reach the theater itself, which occupied a lower building extending through the middle of the block from 43rd to 44th street. This structure included both a grand lobby at the north end and a stage at the south end. A large orchestra pit could be raised and lowered from the basement.
To this day, the Paramount Building is known for its large four-faced clock near the top of the pyramidial structure, and an ornamental globe at the very top of the building.
History
The New York Paramount opened in November 1926, setting a box office record for the city of $80,000 in one week, and then continued in operation for only four decades. During that time it was the site of numerous movie premieres, but it was also one of the city's most popular locations for live performances, presenting such performers as
Benny Goodman ,Jack Benny ,Tommy Dorsey ,Frank Sinatra , andDean Martin and Jerry Lewis . During the 1950s, along with theBrooklyn Paramount Theater , it was the site of popular liveRock'n'Roll shows presented by promoterAlan Freed . It was also the site of the world premier of Love Me Tender,Elvis Presley 's first movie.In 1964, the Paramount closed. The theater was gutted and turned into retail space and office space for "
The New York Times ". The entrance arch was closed in and the marquee removed. There was no trace of the theater remaining, but in2000 , a large section of the Broadway office building was leased by World Wrestling Federation, which recreated the famous arch and marquee (with the Paramount logo restored) and developed the space into WWF New York, a themed club and restaurant. The WWF operation closed some years later, and the location is now home to theHard Rock Cafe , relocated from its previous home on 57th Street.The theater's original
Wurlitzer organ now resides in theCentury II Convention Hall inWichita, Kansas .The Paramount Building was added to the
National Register of Historic Places many years after the theater was gutted.ee also
*
Madison Square Garden . For a short while in the late 1980s early 1990s, The Theater At Madison Square Garden was called The New Paramount Theater after a corporate merger. Before it was called the Paramount, it was known as the Felt Forum.External links
* [http://www.nyc-architecture.com/MID/MID110.htm NYC Architecture - Paramount Building page.]
* [http://www.nytstore.com/ProdDetail.aspx?prodId=1240 New York Times photo of Paramount demolition, 1964.]
* [http://cinematreasures.org/theater/548/ Cinema Treasures page for the Paramount. Very long, with many comments by people familiar with the theater.]
* [http://www.nyparamountwurlitzer.com The official website for the New York Paramount organ in Wichita, Kansas.]
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