New Boro Park Theatre

5102 New Utrecht Avenue,
Brooklyn, NY 11219

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Additional Info

Previously operated by: Keith-Albee, Loew's Inc., RKO

Styles: Neo-Classical

Previous Names: B.F. Keith's Boro Park Theatre, Loew's Boro Park Theatre, Yiddish Boro Park Theatre

Nearby Theaters

New Boro Park Theatre

The B.F. Keith’s Boro Park Theatre opened on April 7, 1921 with 6-acts of Keith vaudeville and on the screen William S. Hart in “O'Malley of the Mounted”. On September 5, 1923, it was taken over by Marcus Loew, who also took over the adjacent West End Theatre. It was equipped with an Estey organ.

In October 1966 it was renamed Yiddish Boro Park Theatre and offered variety on the stage and a movie, usually in Yiddish. By October 1967 it was renamed New Boro Park Theatre and offered art house movies and a stage show.

As was the case with some of these great old houses, the Boro Park Theatre ran XXX (much like its neighbor, the 46th Street Theatre, aka the Universal Theatre) in its waning days.

It closed in the early-1970’s and was torn down in August 1977. A branch of the US Post Office now stands on the corner under the elevated subway it once occupied.

Contributed by philipgoldberg

Recent comments (view all 81 comments)

wurl240
wurl240 on March 28, 2009 at 10:19 pm

In my first NYC trip in 1971, I got a tour of the BP from the son of one of the owners. It was closed and lit with only emergency power
as I recall. The owners had not known the Estey organ was in their theatre as two large boxes sat on each side of the pit—-the one on the left was hiding the console. With flashlights, we crawled up to
organ chambers on a steel ladder. There was grill work at the top.
The instrument had been vandalized as had the console. A friend brought one or two ranks out to San Francisco not long after. Still have a “Smoking in Balcony Only” sign from the BP. Loaned my color
interior shots to my host—-and never again saw them. Someone had tried to jazz up the interior by outlining things in bright orange paint which really didn’t help.

Bway
Bway on May 4, 2009 at 12:36 pm

This ugly building appears to have replaced the Boro Hall. What a downgrade from the photo Lost Memory lined to…

View link

ERD
ERD on June 27, 2009 at 12:23 pm

The building in Lost Memory’s 1968 photo is the Blythborne post office. Enjoyed jloew’s informative post. I didn’t realize the organ was still there at that time. Like so many theatres, what a shame it is gone, a sign of the “modern” times.

TLSLOEWS
TLSLOEWS on May 19, 2010 at 8:41 pm

To bad there are no shots from the LOEWS days.

Mike Rogers
Mike Rogers on May 19, 2010 at 11:11 pm

I can see the “GUESS WHO’S COMING TO DINNER” one sheet on the poster frame clearly. Wish i had it.

ERD
ERD on May 29, 2011 at 11:24 am

The photo should be taken from New Utrecht Avenue as that is where the marquee was.

schooner
schooner on October 21, 2013 at 8:40 pm

HI Everyone

I’m new to this site and was just looking at movie theaters I use to attend as a kid living in Boro Park. Also use to go to: Lowe’s 46th St. Theater under the El on New Utrecht Ave. GOD its such a long time ago. Speaking of a long time ago I wonder if any you seniors out there remember a Boxing Gym right across the street from the Boro Park Theater ~ upstairs its name was: THE LIGHTER BOXING GYM. It was over a lamp store. I use to do some boxing there under the sponsorship of LightWeight Campion: Paddy DeMarco. Do any you guys/gals have any memories or info on this ?

GOD bless you ALL
Ray M.

HomecrestGuy
HomecrestGuy on January 18, 2019 at 5:11 pm

Photo with marquee added to Gallery.

johndereszewski
johndereszewski on January 20, 2019 at 5:51 pm

Thanks for the photo, HomecrestGuy. I just noticed, as the picture shows, that this theater featured an Amateur Night. I just wonder what that was like and how widespread – or not – these events were in other theaters at that time. This was a bit more ambitious than Dish Night.

rivest266
rivest266 on October 15, 2020 at 4:05 pm

Grand opening ad posted

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