Opened: August, 1908. This unique theatre was located on the 5th floor of Hamburger's Department Store and was known as Hamburger's Arrow Theatre. Construction on the building had begun in 1905. Asher Hamburger and his son David were the operators, moving from an earlier store on Spring St. This early postcard is from the Los Angeles Public Library collection. Down Broadway on the left it's the Majestic Theatre, also a project of Asher Hamburger.
The space devoted to the theatre was 80' x 100'. During construction, the October 4, 1907 issue of the Times referred to it as a "wee playhouse." It had a stage, employed a small orchestra, and offered movies plus a wide range of other attractions including minstrel shows, singers, illustrated lectures and meetings. Initial pricing was 5 cents (or 10 cents reserved) -- "Always a good show!"
Architect: Alfred F. Rosenheim designed the entire building as well as the theatre space. It has 1.1 million square feet of space, much of that in 1920s additions to the original building. Among other projects, Rosenheim also designed the Cameo Theatre.
Seating: 500, according to an October 4, 1907 L.A. Times article.
We don't get any titles but the Arrow does appear in this 1915 newspaper listing of local theatre attractions. Thanks to Ken McIntyre for locating it.
Soon the floor was leveled and the theatre became a phonograph sales area. Thanks to Jim Lewis for locating this 1920 photo in the magazine Dry Goods Economist. Note the organ pipes near that left column.
The building was sold to the May family of St. Louis in 1923 and was renamed the May Co. in 1927.
The theatre was still usable in 1941. Thanks to Ranjit Sandhu for locating this July 31 L.A. Times ad for free screenings of Charlie Chaplin in "Easy Street" along with the Mary Pickford film "Shadows of Doubt":
Presumably these were 16mm screenings. Ranjit includes the ad on the L.A. Revival Theatres page of his site about Buster Keaton's "The General". In addition to his research, also see our page here on this site about 16mm Revival Houses. Also see the pages about the Movie Parade on Gordon St. in Hollywood and Eddie Kohn's other Movie Parade/Nickelodeon location on Highland Ave.
Status: The building still stands at 8th and Broadway but as of 2019 only the ceiling of the theatre remained on the 5th and 6th floors. The May Co. closed this downtown store in 1986.
The building's first floor got turned into a warren of swap-meet style booths and rebranded as the Broadway Trade Center. The upper floors became a maze of garment manufacturing shops. It was owned by investors in Beverly Hills who were unable to come up with a viable redevelopment scheme. Ideas in the past had included condos and a hotel. It was placed on the market in 2013.
Roger Vincent reported the Broadway Trade Center's sale to New York based Waterbridge Capital in an April 2014 L.A. Times story. The article also had a nice history of the building. It has been gutted and is in the process of getting
redeveloped with a mix of retail, creative office space and a big food
hall. "The Curtain Lifts at 801 S. Broadway" was a July 2017 Urbanize story about the project.
In March 2018 the Commercial Observer had a story about Waterbridge and their partner Continental Equities seeking an additional $500 million in financing to complete the project. At the time they were going to call it the Museum Building.
Lots of demo has been done along with exterior restoration work and a seismic retrofit. In mid-2019 the project was stalled with the developers putting the partially completed project on the market. They got no takers and as of 2023 the project was still unfinished.
Looking toward what had been the stage in the 5th floor theatre space after lots of demolition. Thanks to Hunter Kerhart for both locating the space as well as taking this 2019 photo. Keep up with his most recent explorations: HunterKerhart.com.
The Broadway side of the building is about 80 feet off to the right. We're looking toward 8th St., across from the Olympic Theatre. This is the only double height space on the 5th floor -- note the lower height on either side. The auditorium pokes up into the space on the 6th floor. Note that thing hanging from the ceiling. It's a motorized movie screen.
A look across the area that had once been the stage. The upper windows are on the 6th floor level. Photo: Bill Counter - 2019
The May Co. Exposition Room in 1930. The Dick Whittington Studio photo is in the USC Digital Library collection. Also see a 1930 photo of the room filled with women for a fashion show.
A 1930 view from house left. Thanks to Dave Etchie for finding the Mott Studios photo for a post on the SoCal Historic Architecture Facebook page. It's one of 18 interior views of the store in a set in the California State Library collection that also includes several closer shots of the proscenium.
The Library also has another set of 11 views of various store departments plus a set of two views of the store's music department.
A fine proscenium detail located by Dave Etchie. He added it as a comment on his SoCal Facebook post.
It's unknown where in the building this room was. It's wider than the 5th floor theatre space. Floor heights in the building vary with the 1st and 2nd floors having the requisite height for this space. It obviously wasn't on the 1st floor. Column width in the building also varies with both the 1st and 2nd floors having a single wider bay running down the center from north to south as well as another on the center running east to west.
More exterior views:
A construction view appearing with an article about Asher Hamburger on the website of the Jewish Museum of the American West. Hill St. is at the bottom. We're looking northeast. Broadway is off to the right. Thanks to Noirish Los Angeles contributor Ethereal Reality for including the photo on his Noirish post #52619.
c.1908 - At the left we're looking south on Broadway toward the Majestic Theatre. 8th St. is going off to the right. It's a Los Angeles Public Library photo.
c.1908 - Another postcard of the new building. Thanks to Mary Mallory for finding this one on eBay. The Los Angeles Public Library also has a version of it.
1909 - A detail from the Bird's Eye View of L.A. that shows the building's original configuration before the additions along Hill St. The Arrow Theatre was to the right of the taller of those two structures on top of the roof. The 1929 addition filled the space between the department store building and the Majestic Theatre. Thanks to Noirish Los Angeles contributor Brent Dickerson for including it on his Noirish post #52620.
A slightly different version of the 1909 map appears on the Library of Congress website.
c.1913 - One panel of a five section panorama by C.C. Pierce in the USC Digital Library collection from the California Historical Society. It was taken from 9th and Main. Between the Majestic Theatre and Hamburger's there's a view of Tally's Broadway Theatre. If you look down the street to 8th and Broadway you'll note that the Merritt Building isn't there yet. The rooftop in the lower right is the Woodley/Mission Theatre.
1930 - Looking north toward 8th St. after the May Co. had done their 1929 addition on the south end of the building where Tally's Broadway had been. Here they're still working on the storefronts. The newly opened Eastern Columbia Building is on the left. The Majestic Theatre, here running "Top Speed" with Joe E. Brown, would get demolished in 1933. At the Orpheum it's "Little Accident" with Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. and Anita Page. It's a Los Angeles Public Library photo.
1939 - A great look east on 8th from Hill St. with the May Co. on the right and the Tower Theatre across Broadway. It's a Dick Whittington Studio photo in the USC Digital Library collection.
1970s? - A Herald Examiner photo looking north on Broadway toward 8th St. It's from the Los Angeles Public Library collection.
2018 - The very slow redevelopment process underway. Photo: Bill Counter
More Information: Mary Mallory's terrific Hollywood Heights / Daily Mirror article from 2013 has some fine research on the Hamburger Building and she details many of the programs presented at the Arrow. She also did a 2018 repost of the article on Daily Mirror.
Wikipedia has an article about the building.
The Cinema Treasures page on Tally's Broadway has many great items about the Arrow unearthed by diligent researcher Jeff Bridges, aka Vokoban. Tally's was just down the block at 833 S. Broadway and was swallowed up by the May Co. expansion of 1929.
Surviving theatre buildings on the 800 block: Tower | Rialto | Orpheum | In addition to the Arrow, the vanished theatres on the 800 block include: Garrick | Tally's Broadway | Majestic | Woodley/Mission |
| back to top | Downtown: theatre district overview | Hill St. and farther west | Broadway theatres | Spring St. theatres | Main St. and farther east | downtown theatres by address | downtown theatres alphabetical list |
| Westside | Hollywood | Westwood and Brentwood | Along the Coast | [more] Los Angeles movie palaces | the main alphabetical list | theatre history resources | film and theatre tech resources | theatres in movies | LA Theatres on facebook | contact info | welcome and site navigation guide |
No comments:
Post a Comment