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Hollywood Playhouse / Hollywood Center Theatre

1445 N. Las Palmas Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90028 | map


Opening: It's unknown when the Hollywood Playhouse opened. It's certainly had a few remodels but the city gives a 1905 construction date for the building. Thanks to Brad Stubbs for capturing this July 13, 2022 photo of its demise. 

This small legit operation and occasional film house was located on the west side of Las Palmas just south of Sunset Blvd. The address sometimes appears as 1451 N. Las Palmas. It's had a number of names including the Actors Center, the Comedy Playhouse, Hollywood Center Theatre, Writers' Club Theatre and the Theatre VII

Seating: 244 in the larger space. There was a second space upstairs with a capacity of 24.  Amenities included a kitchen and a large patio.

Architect: Unknown. At the time of construction this block of Las Palmas south of Sunset was called Estelle Ave. It's not a block that is mapped on the 1907 Sanborn Real Estate Map that's in the Library of Congress collection. 
 
 

The building is the top one seen in this detail from image 30 of the 1913 Sanborn Map that's on the Library of Congress website. Estelle Ave. (now Las Palmas) is two blocks east of Highland. That's Sunset Blvd. at the top of the image. The map doesn't indicate any particular use for the building at the time. 

 
Floorplans c.2016:
 
 
 A basement plan.  
 
 
 
A main floor plan. Las Palmas Ave. runs along the left edge of the drawing. The cross hatched areas evidently had been rented at the time the plan was drawn. These are from the building's 2016 listing on Loopnet.
 
 

A 2nd floor plan, again with Las Palmas on the left.

History: It's unknown when the building was first used as a theatre.

It's discussed in one of Roger Delfont's articles archived on the site Ad Sausage that analyzes ads for different theatres that appeared in the Los Angeles Free Press:

"The Hollywood Center Theatre moved between film and legit theatre, depending on who rented its facilities. For a brief period, the spot was known as the Writers' Club Theatre - perhaps due to the original Writer's Club being located nearby, on the corner of Sunset and Las Palmas. Primarily, community theater was its bread and butter. Everything from 'The Caine Mutiny' to the musical-satire 'Unisex '72'..."
 
In 1964 it was being called the Hollywood Center Theatre and running a production of "Cyrano de Bergerac." In 1965 Gerald Gordon's Los Angeles Youth Theatre production of "The Fantasticks" moved over from the Le Grande Theatre (the former Hollywood Canteen). The world premier of the children's musical "Wind in the Willows," with music by Academy Award winning composer David Raksin, opened in the Spring of 1966. In 1967 the Youth Theatre's annual Christmas production for children was a Gerald Gordon musical version of "Rumpelstiltskin."

And then by 1968 the venue was running porno.


A 1968 ad for the Hollywood Center running films for unshockable adults.  
 
 
 
A September 1968 as located by Ken McIntyre. That Cine 1 is one of many venues listed on the Storefront Porno page. Roger Delfont has more:

"The next chapter for the Hollywood Center Theatre started in 1969, when the venue became Theatre VII ('Where friendliness is Contagious') and acts such as Charles Pierce (The Master of Camp) hit the boards. A year later, and now advertising itself as 'The only gay theatre like it anywhere!' -- the Mark VII offered Live Male Stage Shows. The name didn't hold; the new moniker was gone a few years later, but male oriented material continued from the likes of Casey Donovan 'The Back Row' (Doug Richards), Gary Yuma 'Fun Farm' and Calvin Culver 'Tubstrip.' 
 
 
 
A January 1970 ad for the venue as Theatre VII appearing on a Ad Sausage page.



A 1971 ad for the Hollywood Center showing Mitchell Brothers porno. If you didn't want that, you could show up for their next festival of early Chaplin films. Thanks to Ken McIntyre for finding various ads for a post on the Photos of Los Angeles Facebook page.

Roger Delfont again: 

"In the mid-70's, all sorts of esoteric theater groups staged shows. The Media Center for Community Action staged 'Soul Alley', featuring Felton Perry... Adding to yet another chapter in the building's history, the venue was home to the Sherwood Oaks Experimental College (once located at Crossroads of the World on Sunset) in the early-80's; offering workshops and record engineering classes. Various name changes occurred throughout the next decade; the Actors Center, the Comedy Playhouse and back to the Hollywood Playhouse."

In the mid-1980s the building got a million dollar remodel resulting in a new theatre space and a restaurant. It was intended to be the anchor for a new development but nothing else transpired. It was a project of the Atlantic Gulf and Pacific Development Corporation and the F.H.M. Corporation with Budd Friedman, Michael Nouri, Stan Handman and Norman Maibaum as principals.
 
In later years the building had been used as the Howard Fine acting school and as an events space. By 2019 it was vacant.  
 
Status: The theatre was destroyed by fire on July 13, 2022 and was later demolished. ABC 7 News had good aerial footage. Thanks to Jason Vega and Russ Jones for spotting the story. It was also on the ABC 7 Facebook page. Nathan Solis did a followup story for the L.A. Times about two people being detained as a result of the fire. 
 
The building was vacant and available for lease at the time of the fire. The broker listed on the signage was Kris Peterson at Denley Investment and Management, 213-463-4100. The firm, which has had all sorts of issues about code violations at some of its buildings, is headed by Mehdi Bolour. 
 
 
Interior views: 
 

The set for an unidentified production at the theatre. Thanks to Eric Lynxwiler for sharing this photo from his amazing collection. It's on Flickr. He's located 13 photos of various sets and groups of performers at the theatre, none identified so far. Start at his first photo and you can page forward through the rest of what he's found. 
 
 

A shot with the actors, from the same production. Thanks again to Eric Lynxwiler for sharing the photo on Flickr. He's the author, with Tom Zimmerman, of the Angel City Press book "Spectacular Illumination: Neon Los Angeles 1925-1965." He's also the author of "Signs of Life: Los Angeles is the City of Neon."

 

A photo from the building's 2016 listing on Loopnet. Thanks to Jason Vega for locating it.
 

More exterior views:


1961 - "Parade - A Hit Review." A view of the building as the Hollywood Center Theatre from the Los Angeles Public Library collection.



1961 - Another photo from the Los Angeles Public Library. We're looking north toward Sunset Blvd.



1976 - Thanks to the Bruce Torrance Historic Hollywood Photographs collection for this view. It's their #T-022-1. On the readerboard: "Are You Now Or Have You Ever Been."
 


c.1985? - An undated Los Angeles Herald Examiner photo of the building as the Hollywood Playhouse from the Los Angeles Public Library collection. The caption was:

"Exterior view of the Writers' Club Theater in Hollywood. This historic theater dated back to the days of Charles Chaplin and Mary Pickford reopened as the Hollywood Playhouse & Cafe following a million dollar remodeling. Located at Sunset and Las Palmas Boulevards, the complex centers on a new 220-seat theatre and restaurant that are to serve as the cornerstone for a shopping center and office complex planned by the Atlantic Gulf & Pacific Development Corporation. Heading up the theatre-restaurant complex are Budd Friedman, Michael Nouri (for Atlantic Gulf & Pacific Development), Stan Handman and Norman Maibaum, under the banner of the F.H.M. Corporation."



 2008 - A photo by Andreas Praefcke that appears on Wikipedia.



2019 - The view south along the vacant building. Photo: Bill Counter



 
2019 - The facade from the post office across the street. Sunset Blvd. is less than half a block off to the right. Photo: Bill Counter
 

2022 - On fire on July 13. It's an image from the ABC7 News footage. Thanks to Jason Vega and Russ Jones for spotting the story. It's also on the ABC7 Facebook page
 

2022 - A wider view from the July 13 ABC7 footage.  

2022 - Looking south from Sunset. Photo: Bill Counter - July 20
 

2022 - A closer view from the north. Photo: Bill Counter - July 20
 

2022 - A peek in through two of the windows. Photo: Bill Counter - July 20
 

2022 - The red tag and notice of demolition on the front porch. Photo: Bill Counter - July 20
 

2022 - The vista back up to Sunset. Photo: Bill Counter - July 20 
 

2023 - Looking toward Sunset after the demo. Photo: Bill Counter - April 15 
 
 

2023 - The view south on Las Palmas. Photo: Bill Counter - April 15 

 

The theatre in the Movies: 
 
 
Dinah Manoff's character is taking classes at the Actors Center Hollywood in the Herbert Ross film "I Ought To Be In Pictures" (20th Century Fox, 1982). She's come west to be in the movies but also to reconnect with her long-absent father, played by Walter Matthau. She was under the impression that he's a famous writer but he's definitely on the far fringes of the business. Ann-Margret plays Matthau's girlfriend. It's based on a Neil Simon play. The cinematography was by David M. Walsh. 
 

Another look at the building, here with the signage calling it the L.A. School of Dramatic Arts. Thanks to Jason Vega for spotting the IMD listing that noted the theatre was a filming location. The facade got a big remodel later in the 1980s. 

The other Hollywood Playhouse: See page on the other Hollywood Playhouse if you're looking for information on the theatre on Vine Street that started as a legit venue, later was known as the Hollywood Palace, and is currently a music venue called Avalon.

7 comments:

  1. The Los Angeles Youth Theater's production of the Fantasticks moved to the Hollywood Center Theater in 1965. It was previously at the Le Grande Theater on Cahuenga blvd, which was the Hollywood Canteen during WWII. I was a member of that group from 1964 thru 1967. The world premier of the children's musical, "Wind in the Willows," with music by Academy Award winning composer, David Raksin, opened there in the Spring of 1966. Gerald Gordon was the Producer and Director for all productions presented by the Youth Theater.

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  2. Right now I'm watching it burn to the ground on KTLA 5. Hopefully no one has been hurt as it was abandoned.

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  3. Looks like it may be gone after a recent fire. https://www.lafd.org/alert/structure-fire-07132022-inc0476

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  4. This building burnt down today, July 13 2022. As it's still actively on fire as I type this, the cause of the fire is not known. https://ktla.com/news/local-news/crews-battle-blaze-at-vacant-theater-in-hollywood/

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  5. I saw both of those productions!

    ReplyDelete
  6. The Hollywood Center Theatre moved between film and legit theatre, depending on who rented its facilities. For a brief period, the spot was known as the Writers' Club Theatre - perhaps due to the original Writer's Club being located nearby, on the corner of Sunset and Las Palmas.

    The next chapter for the Hollywood Center Theatre started in 1969, when the venue became Theatre VII ('Where friendliness is Contagious') and acts such as Charles Pierce (The Master of Camp) hit the boards. A year later, and now advertising itself as 'The only gay theatre like it anywhere!' -- the Mark VII offered Live Male Stage Shows. The name didn't hold; the new moniker was gone a few years later, but male oriented material continued from the likes of Casey Donovan The Back Row (Doug Richards), Gary Yuma Fun Farm and Calvin Culver Tubstrip.

    In the mid-70's, all sorts of esoteric theater groups staged shows; The Media Center for Community Action staged 'Soul Alley', featuring Felton Perry. Perry was best known years later as Johnson, in Paul Verhoeven's 1987 hit Robocop -- "He's legally dead. We can do pretty much what we want to him."

    Adding to yet another chapter in the building's history, the venue was home to the Sherwood Oaks Experimental College (once located at Crossroads of the World on Sunset) in the early-80's; offering workshops and record engineering classes. Various name changes occurred throughout the next decade; the Actors Center, the Comedy Playhouse and back to the Hollywood Playhouse.

    ReplyDelete