The theatre was on the building's 2nd floor with a wrap-around balcony on 3.
Architect: Capitain and Kremple. Thanks to Nathan Marsak for the data on Noirish Los Angeles post #50672 where he has photos of other buildings by the two architects. See "A History of California..." by James Miller Guinn on Google Books for additional information on John Paul Kremple.
An October 22 Los Angeles Herald article located by Ethereal Reality. It can be seen on the California Digital Newspaper Collection website. The ball at the Music Hall referred to the former Turn Verein Hall at 227 S. Spring St. that later was known as Lyceum Hall.
There was an article about the event in the October 23 Los Angeles Herald. It's on the website of the California Digital Newspaper collection. The January 1, 1894 Herald reported it was nearing completion. The building opened in April 1894 as Turn Halle, also known as Turner Hall, a German social hall.
Use as a theatre: The auditorium in the building was operated as a commercial venue, the Angelus Theatre, beginning in 1905. Initially it was a vaudeville house.
Thanks to Ken McIntyre for locating this Times item for a comment on a thread about the theatre on the Photos of Los Angeles Facebook group. Another item appearing after the Hecla's opening noted that the Star had been of "unlamented reputation."
Later in 1906 was known as the New Star Vaudeville Theatre. The copy for a June 6, 1906 ad in the Times located by Jeff Bridges:
A February 1908 ad. Thanks to Ken McIntyre for adding it as a comment on a Photos of Los Angeles thread about this building and the Hippodrome across the street. A February 19 Times ad located by Jeff Bridges had this copy:
"Bijou Theater 323 South Main St. This afternoon and evening, all this week. The Tommy Burns-Gunner Moir fight pictures taken at London, England, ten rounds and knockout. Admission 25c, any seat."
In the 1908 city directory it's become the Theatre Royal and from 1909 onward was the Regal. In the 1909 directory we get a listing for Charles M. Bockoven & W. A. Dean running the place. Bockoven had earlier been in partnership with Billy Clune as Southwest Amusement Co. A May 2, 1909 Times item located by Jeff Bridges gives some idea of the programming:
"The Main-street Regal Theater programme for the coming week will include the first appearance of the Sisters Petite, singers and dancers; Warren Ellsworth, story-teller and monologist; James Heatherington, in illustrated songs and travelogues; new moving pictures, and music by Ransom’s orchestra."
The Times covered the story in this article from their February 5 issue. Thanks to Noirish Los Angeles contributor Flying Wedge for including it in his Noirish post #50659. The gym moved across the street to a second floor space in the Hippodrome Theatre building.
This photo appeared in the July 28, 1951 issue of the L.A. Times. Thanks to Noirish Los Angeles contributor Brent Dickerson for sharing it in his Noirish post #50665. The caption:
"TIME CAPSULE - Lead box taken by wreckers from old Turner Hall yielded Los Angeles Times dated Oct. 22, 1893, held by Earl Bloomster of the wrecking company and Miss Jeanne Pelland. Also found in time capsule were silver coins, in foreground."
The article about the cornerstone in the July 28, 1951 L.A. Times. Thanks, Brent!
Status: The site is now part of the Reagan State of California Office Building.
Interior views:
An undated view of the auditorium after it had been turned into a gym. Thanks to Ken McIntyre for spotting the photo. It's a Daily News photo that's in the UCLA Library collection.
The Regal in the Movies: We see lots of the interior in "The Street with No Name" (20th Century Fox, 1948). See the Historic L.A. Theatres in Movies post for six more screenshots at the gym. We also see the Regent, the Muse and the Optic. The film, directed by William Keighley, stars Mark Stevens and Richard Widmark in a tale of an FBI informant trying to infiltrate a mob of gangsters. The cinematographer was Joseph McDonald.
More exterior views:
c.1894 - A postcard view of the building whose auditorium would later be the Regal Theatre (and many other names). Thanks to Noirish Los Angeles contributor BifRayRock for finding the photo in the California State Library collection.
1923 - A look north with the Turnverein Hall, formerly the Regal Theatre, on the left just beyond the bookstore. The Hippodrome on the right at 320 S. Main is playing "Shifting Sands." That vertical arrow at the extreme left of the photo is on the Follies Theatre, 337 S. Main. Thanks to Ken McIntyre for finding the photo for a post on the Photos of Los Angeles Facebook page. A somewhat fuzzier version is in the Los Angeles Public Library collection.
c.1932 - A look south on Main toward the building formerly housing the Regal. Also in the picture near us are the Wonderland Theatre at 315 S. Main (later called the Jade) and, down the block, the "Burlesque" vertical at 337 S. Main on the Follies. It's a photo by Anton Wagner in the collection of the California Historical Society.
c.1932 - A detail from the Anton Wagner photo. Note the "Boxing" signage on the marquee -- and dancing someplace upstairs! Wagner took hundreds of photos of the L.A. area in 1932 and 1933 for a thesis topic having to do with the way the area's topology influenced the character of its inhabitants. The CHS has collected over 400 of them for their album "Anton Wagner: Los Angeles 1932-33."
2019 - The Reagan State Office Building on the site of the Regal. We're looking south toward 4th St. The sole historic survivor on either side of the 300 block is the Van Nuys/Barclay Hotel on the far left. Photo: Bill Counter
More Information: Lots of research by Jeff Bridges and others appears on the Cinema Treasures page devoted to the Regal.
The building can be seen on an 1894 Sanborn insurance map on the Library of Congress website.
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