1106 W. Gardena Blvd. Gardena, CA 90247 | map |
Opened: February 1939. The location is on the south side of the street, one building west of Berendo Ave. Berendo is two blocks west of Vermont.
Architect: Clarence Eugene Noerenberg. Thanks to Joe Vogel for researching the project. He comments:
"This 800-seat house was designed by architect C. E. Noerenberg, best known for designing a number of branch libraries for the City of Los Angeles, and for Dorsey High School, which he designed in partnership with Hollywood architect H. L. Gogerty."
The stub from Denise Gaskell Snuffin's October 22, 1955 paycheck. She shared it on Cinema Treasures.
A look down the alley toward the back of the former theatre, the second building in. Image: Google Maps - 2022. Joe Vogel comments:
"If you take Google’s street view down the alley behind the building you can see to the left of the single rear door that the plaster is separating, in line with the top of the doorway, indicating that there could formerly have been a double exit door at that location. There is also an area at the other end of the rear which looks to have been bricked up, though it is difficult to make out due to layers of paint. That would have been the location of the second pair of rear exit doors. And again, the plaster appears to be separating in a line that would indicate the top of a doorway that has been bricked up."
More information: See our page about the Gardena Cinema, a 1946 vintage house that didn't get named the Gardena until 1995. There's also a page on an earlier theatre in Gardena, the Embassy, located on Vermont Blvd. There was yet another early venue at 918 Palm Ave. in Gardena. In the 1922-23 Watts-Compton city directory and the 1925 Watts directory it's listed as The Auditorium. In the 1927-28 city directory it's listed as the Gardena Theatre.
See the Cinema Treasures page about the Gardena Theatre. Thanks to Joe Vogel for his research. Cinema Treasures also has a page about the later Gardena Cinema on Crenshaw Blvd.
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