Rivoli Theatre
1620 Broadway,
New York,
NY
10019
1620 Broadway,
New York,
NY
10019
50 people favorited this theater
Showing 276 - 300 of 1,004 comments
I hate that black skyscraper every time I pass it. Same for the Roxy site. And Roseland, I was just there a year ago for the opening night party of “Motown the Musical”. Another shame that one is gonna bite the dust too.
And now a venue of a different sort is also succumbing to developers, Roseland Ballroom.
“Replaced by a black skyscraper” This would also apply to the Roxy and Capitol, three of the finest and most famous movie palaces ever built, denied to future generations through sheer greed of developers and a city administration blind to it’s unique heritage.
Pic of World Premiere ad “The Snake Pit” added to Photo Section.
Just uploaded photos of the marquee and front of theatre during the engagements of STAR!, HELLO, DOLLY! and JUSTINE. Taken in 1968 and 1969
World Premiere of “Modern Times” February 5, 1936 with performances beginning the next day. Ad posted in photo section.
Thanks for the info – what I’ve been doing is copying entire lists of films (not just single titles) from Excel and pasting them in.
I have not been counting “invitation-only charity premieres” such as those held for roadshow films, but the week that the regular paying-public got to get into the theater…I found a lot of these were on Tuesday evenings, which is why some of my dates are a week later…and yes, I used Variety a lot, but I would subtract 6 days from the date on the city report.
RSM3853…I’d hate to think your effort will go to waste if folks choose not to read them because they dislike the layout or question the accuracy/comprehensiveness of the information. Using Wednesday dates is your prerogative, of course, but I think it will lead to confusion. Some titles are listed a week late (CLEOPATRA, for instance) and I suspect it’s because you used Variety, which reports grosses a week after the reporting period.
Having spent numerous hours researching JAWS for a retrospective article, I can state that I found no theaters that opened it on Wednesday, June 18th, 1975. I found all “first wave” openings were Friday, June, 20th (but I guess you should list it as the 18th if you insist on using the “Wednesday of the opening week” approach).
You don’t need to re-type everything. It’s the Cinema Treasures application that is causing the jumbled paragraph layout. To create a list, simply paste in your title, then follow it with two spaces and a hard return, and it will create…
10/17/56 Around the World in 80 Days
10/01/58 South Pacific
04/01/59 Compulsion…
Thanks so very much for catching that, Coate – I put my info in Excel spreadsheets and didn’t catch the word “Rivoli” for the “Jaws” row because it was behind “Loew’s Orpheum” alphabetically. It opened in most cities on Wednesday, June 18, 1975. I actually wondered about that when I sorted the spreadsheet – didn’t think “The Return of the Pink Panther” played that long.
Re: Your other concerns. As I’ve already typed all this data in Excel, I don’t have time to retype everything, so I just copy and paste, which probably is what makes it one paragraph. Any suggestions to improve the format are welcome – I’m just trying to get my data on here for others to save them all the years of microfilm reading I’ve done.
As far using Wednesday dates, I grew up and live in Pittsburgh, and our theaters changed bills on that day up to around October 1974, when they began trying Fridays. Going through old newspapers on microfilms, it would take forever to look at every single day to see what new openings there were. In addition, Variety used Wednesdays for their weekly box-office reports so I choose to do so, also. The date I use is just considered by me to be the first day of the opening week, although many cities opened new films on Wednesdays beside Pittsburgh.
Finally, I think that anyone who might be interested in Cinema Treasures is pretty much already aware of the titles that were “roadshow presentations” and there are other websites that list 70 mm or other large size film, so that info is already available elsewhere…I was just interested in what theaters played what films when compared to here, regardless of process or type of booking.
But I thank you for reading my posts! :–)
Judging by the picture shown here…Jaws drew a huge crowd here.
Coate..you are right, I was GM there at that time, one it had a World Premiere on the 18th or 19th…Back then there was what they called “A RED CARPET” run..then a few weeks later opened wide.
RSM3853… Also, I appreciate all of the research (as I am sure others here do as well), and I wish more people compiled info of this type, but a few undesirable things, in my opinion, stand out. One, the lists are difficult to read presented as a giant paragraph. I think readers would find it much easier to read and reference if you used a left-margin-based list. (I think to create a hard return in the current Cinema Treasures format is two spaces and a return.) Two, I think using the Wednesday dates is going to disappoint or even infuriate anyone with a serious interest in this type of information. It would not have taken much more time to have scanned through the microfilm to ascertain the precise opening date. And, three, I think it would be useful and interesting to identify those films that were a roadshow or employed any type of special distribution/exhibition process to distinguish them from the ordinary releases.
RSM3853… “Jaws” is missing from your list. It started 06/20/75 (or 06/18/75 using your “Wednesday of the opening week” approach).
Films at the Rivoli from 1958-1975. Date is the Wednesday of the opening week. 10/17/56Around the World in 80 Days 10/01/58South Pacific (pop) 04/01/59Compulsion 06/10/59John Paul Jones 08/05/59The Big Fisherman 01/13/60The Story on Page One 03/09/60Can-Can 10/26/60The Alamo 03/22/61The King and I ® 04/19/61Mein Kamph 05/17/61On the Double 06/21/61Two Loves 07/26/61Francis of Assisi 10/18/61West Side Story 04/03/63The Ugly American 06/19/63Cleopatra 09/02/64Samson and the Slave Queen 09/02/64A House is Not a Home 11/04/64Youngblood Hawke 12/23/64Sex and the Single Girl 03/03/65The Sound of Music 12/21/66The Sand Pebbles 08/23/67The Trip 10/11/67Gone With the Wind ® 10/23/68Star! 04/02/69Sweet Charity 12/17/69Hello, Dolly! 08/12/703 in the Cellar 10/21/70The Professionals/In Cold Blood ® 10/28/70Cromwell 12/23/70The Lady in the Car With Glasses and a Gun 01/27/71The Last Valley 03/10/71Lawrence of Arabia ® 05/26/71Big Jake 07/21/71The Seven Minutes 08/04/71The Abominable Dr. Phibes 08/04/71Yog: Monster from Space 08/18/71Fools' Parade 11/03/71Fiddler on the Roof 12/06/72Man of La Mancha 03/28/73The Godfather ® 04/11/73The Swingin' Stewardesses 04/18/73Scorpio 05/09/73Theater of Blood 06/27/73Live and Let Die 08/01/73Jesus Christ Superstar 10/10/73Midnight Cowboy/Where’s Poppa? ® 10/17/73MASH ® 10/31/73Nurses Report 11/14/73The Don is Dead 12/12/73Superchick 12/19/73The Seven-Ups 07/17/74Mr. Majestyk 07/31/74Bank Shot 08/21/74Pink Floyd 09/04/74Doctor Zhivago ® 10/16/74Gone With the Wind ® 11/13/74The Savage is Loose 12/18/74The Island at the Top of the World 02/05/75Harry and Tonto/Claudine ® 03/12/75The Great Waldo Pepper 05/21/75The Return of the Pink Panther 12/03/75A Trip with the Teacher 12/17/75Treasure Island/Dr. Syn ® 12/24/75Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs ®
Every Sunday in December 2013, the NYC subway system runs a vintage train filled with ads from the 1940’s and 1950’s:
http://i6.photobucket.com/albums/y231/billhuelbig/Vintage%20NYC%20Subway/DSCF0551_zpsae3c76c3.jpg
to Tinseltoes-
i knew Liz and Dick did not attend the premiere at this theater but i had not known there was a protest by an African-American church in Harlem for casting a white actress in the title role. the interesting part of that protest is simple- regardless of what Cleopatra looked like physically ethnically/culturally she was like 99% Greek.
relevant part of above article- A particularly gruesome mutilation was the one visited on Thomas Lamb’s 1917 Rivoli Theater, once at 49th and Broadway. Lamb did not literally reproduce the Doric facade of the Parthenon, but on busy Broadway it was certainly close enough.
The white glazed terra-cotta facade lasted until 1986, when the owners destroyed a column and beheaded the top — gods, classical drapery, chariots and all. At the time, preservation groups were focused on the stage theaters; the Rivoli was built for film, and it was not on anyone’s radar until the bucrania were out of the barn.
It’s hard to believe they would destroy such a beautiful theater. I remember my parents taking me to see The Sound of Music here. Even as a boy that huge screen really blew me away. A great treasure…at least we have our memories of it…
Never made it to a road show in the Rivoli but was there for Jaws on Saturday night 10:30 show high up in the rafters second day of release…a great audience experience highlighted by a lady in a very very green suit – a hostess from Air Pistachio as per my friend JC’s comments United Artists never really got the good Broadway bookings after that – most went to Loews Astor Plaza and State or the Criterion multiplex…the house met a sad end as the United Artists 1 and 2
Thanks indeed Sam Irvin for your story about MY FAVORITE YEAR. I remember passing the Rivoli (fall of 1981 maybe?)when that faux HOUSE OF WAX sign was waiting to be hoisted to its spot in front of the real marquee. I was quite confused and intrigued as to what this was all about. It wasn’t until I went to see MY FAVORITE YEAR the following October (at the Paramount Theatre at Columbus Circle) and saw the opening sequence that I put two and two together.
I saw “The Last Starfighter” at one of the Rivoli Twins in July, 1984. I was aware “South Pacific” had played a long run there in Todd-AO, having transferred from the Criterion. Whilst being impressed by the cinema I was in, I wish I’d seen the large theatre in its 70mm. heyday. All the above info. is fascinating and I now know just how important the Rivoli was.
Just put Great Waldo Pepper Marque photo and partial Program with guest list.
The Rivoli Theatre can be seen in the opening crane shot of the film “My Favorite Year” (MGM/UA, 1982) starring Peter O'Toole. The movie is set in 1954 and the marquee to the Rivoli is emblazened with a display for the classic Vincent Price horror film “House of Wax” (Warner Brothers, 1953) presented in “3 Dimension.” The slogan reads: “Every thrill of its astounding story comes off the screen right at you!” The key art on the marquee shows a line of chorus girls and a shadowy figure kidnapping one of them. I actually worked on “My Favorite Year” as a production assistant for the New York location shooting (under New York unit producer A. Kitman Ho — who went on to produce such films as “Wall Street,” “JFK,” “Platoon,” and “Born on the Fourth of July”). I remember well the day of the crane shot outside the Rivoli Theatre (at Broadway and 50th Street) because I was such a huge Vincent Price fan and a fan of “House of Wax.” I remember discussing our love of the film with the movie’s director Richard Benjamin and the production designer Charles Rosen (a fellow North Carolina native who had production designed the 1978 remake of “The Invasion of the Body Snatchers”). There was also a sidewalk newsstand on that block that was decorated with period 1954 magazines and newspapers. During the lunch break, it was my job to guard the newsstand — and, let me tell you, it wasn’t easy. Many tough New York pedestrians were rushing by, blindly plopping down coins to purchase the daily newspaper, not realizing that these newspapers were mockups of 1954 newspapers. I kept having to stop them from just grabbing them. I literally got into tugs of war with more than one annoyed passerby. Lots of other pedestrians were trying to buy tickets for “House of Wax” at the Rivoli boxoffice and got extremely miffed when they were told that “House of Wax” was not really playing there and that the marquee had been mocked up for a new movie being shot that day. Instead of laughing it off as if they’d just been punk’d on “Candid Camera,” most of these jaded New Yorkers were simply pissed by the inconvenience. So much for the glamor of filmmaking. And, luckily, no one was hurt during the melee.
I love the JAWS marque…I was MGR. during that time..My question is where did that photo come from and props to you…
In Ross Melnick’s book “AMERICAN SHOWMAN” he mentions that Roxy had been using scent at the Rialto in December 1916.