Connor Palace Theatre
1615 Euclid Avenue,
Cleveland,
OH
44115
1615 Euclid Avenue,
Cleveland,
OH
44115
13 people favorited this theater
Showing 26 - 50 of 57 comments
Here are some new photos I took July 2009 of the Palace Theatre:
Exterior (front and side):
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Lobbies:
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Auditorium:
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This beautiful theatre should have the great marquee recreated instead of the tacky thing that’s hanging there now. It was the one part of the restoration that was poorly done (IMHO).
From Boxoffice magazine, January 1960:
CLEVELAND-The Palace Theater will revert to a continuous, popular price policy Wednesday January 20, with the discontinuation, for the time being at least, of the roadshow policy that has been in effect since November 14, 1956, with the first area Cinerama presentation. “Goliath and the Barbarians”, an AIP picture distributed here by Imperial Pictures, has been chosen to bring the Palace back to a mass rather than a class house. The reason for the reversion was the paucity of available roadshow quality pictures, according to Sam Schultz of Selected Theaters, which will buy and book the house for owners Samuel Silk and Will Halpern of New York.
A book entitled “Cleveland’s Playhouse Square” by Patricia M. Mote chronicles in words and photographs the Loew’s State & Ohio, RKO Allen & Palace and Hanna theaters from their opening in the 1920s through 2006. It can be found in the Local Interest section of Cleveland area bookstores, and for those not in the area it can be ordered from the publisher at the following website:
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Can anyone document dates of The Three Stooges (and/or Ted Healy and his “Racketeers”) live personal appearasnces at the Palace?
The Three Stooges Fan Club is trying to document all their personal appearances. Visit the Museum’s website www.stoogeum.com
Thanks,
Frank Reighter
In his posting of June 9, 2007, dave-bronx is correct: it is the State Theatre which has the massive new stage, not the Palace. The Playhouse Square Center published a one-page sheet with a plan of the complex, showing all 4 theatres, and the office buildings, their lobbies and the inside passageways which connect them. It’s possible to walk from the garage on the northwest corner of the complex to any of the theatres, or from one theatre to another, without going outside to Euclid Avenue. The State Theatre is directly behind the Palace. All of the theatres in Playhouse Square are well worth seeing, as is the beautiful Severance Hall, a super-deluxe concert hall in its own park a few miles east of downtown. There are some very interestng buildings downtown, plus a great park on the lakefront near which is the rock ‘n roll museum, a big sports stadium and a trolley car museum.
The Marquee of the Palace leaves something to be desired. They didn’t even attempt to restore a marquees from the 1920’s thru the 1950’s. I think the director of Playhouse Square should look at proper marquee restorations at historical movie palaces across the country. There are four theatres next door to each other and none are very attractive. At the very least restore at least one vertical on one 0f the theares instead af the tacky plastic vertical that spells out Playhouse Square.brucec
Ron Salters: The new stage house is on the State, not the Palace. The Palace has no place to expand to, it is bounded on the south by Euclid Ave, on the east by E 17 St, on the north by the State auditorium and on the west by the State lobby. Behind the back wall of the Palace stage is the back wall of the State auditorium.
Chuck 1231: When I worked here as an usher, I’m recalling that there was a fairly large room that we used as an ushers room off of a landing of the stairway going to the top of the balcony on the east side. It had a window with a view of 17th St. Though I don’t recall specifically, I would assume there is another similar room on the west side, since the auditorium is more or less symmetrical. Perhaps one of these rooms was used by Loew’s for their Regional Manager.
Here is a photo, circa 1940:
http://tinyurl.com/laqrz
During renovations, the original stagehouse was demolished and a new one constructed. When one enters it from the scene dock in the rear stage wall, if the curtain is up and the stage is empty, the effect is like walking into a giant hanger for Goodyear blimps! The Palace’s stage is absolutely mammoth and must rank as one of the largest stages of any theatre in America.
At my Photobucket link above, I have added a view of the lobby of the Palace as it appears today.
Patsy, when the Palace closed in 1969 the marquee was torn down and the front entrance was boarded up. The theatre has been restored for quite a few years now, and only in the last several years have they finally installed a new marquee. I’ve seen photos of it but can’t seem to locate any right now. It is a half-circle of steel and glass, with no attraction board like a movie theatre would have – basically just a canopy. It is similar to the new marquee of the Allen theatre, just down the block from the Palace. That marquee can be seen at the sign companys website at the following link: http://www.wagnersign.com/allen01.html
I seem to remember seeing a photo of the Palace when it opened in 1922, but I can’t remember what the original marquee looked like.
After viewing the photos and seeing the RKO Palace marquee can anyone tell me if the marquee still looks the same?
Courtesy of Cinema Treasures reader ‘Pres’ I have added a photo of the RKO marquee on the Palace in 1954. Same link as above:
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In the mid-1960s one of the downtown theatres, I can’t remember which one, in the summertime would hang a painted sign on the bottom of the marquee that said “Cooled By Refrigeration”, in blue letters with icicles hanging on them. Anybody remember which theatre that was?
Here are some interior photos from the mid-1970s. In the view looking at the house from the stage you can see the Cinerama projection booth under the balcony. In the view of the stage from the top of the balcony, the curtains on either side of the stage are where the Cinerama screen extended to on each side. That screen required that the opera boxes on each side be ripped out. These have now been restored, and the Cinerama booth removed.
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lostmemory: Any interior photos?
The opening that connected the Palace dressing rooms with the mezzanine of Loew’s State was added in 1978.
I remember the Cinerama booth on the main floor very well I lived in there for two years 1974-74
The opening that connected the Palace dressing rooms with the mezzine of Loew’s State was added in 1978.
I remember the Cinerama booth on the main floor very well I lived in there for two years 1974-74
I went to the Palace only once, long after its days of glories were behind it. It was two or three summers ago when they were showing Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Birds” as part of the Cinema on the Square program. The ads claimed it was Ohio’s largest screen. Well, maybe it was at one time, but not when I was there. The screen seemed smaller than the ones at your average multiplex.
The regional manager at the time the Loew’s theatres downtown closed was Herb Brown – who then moved his office to Loew’s West in Rocky River.
The Ohio in Columbus is much more lavish and bigger than the Cleveland Ohio. And the Cleveland Palace is likewise in relation to the Columbus Palace.
I have been reminded that the 4 theatres, Palace, State, Ohio and Allen were all connected: in the Palace if you go on the stage and go up to the second or third level of old dressing rooms on the west side, one of the dressing rooms had a back door. Inside that door is a vestibule with another door, going through it brought you into the mezzanine lobby of the State, near the top of the marble stairs from the main floor. There were two or three fairly large offices on the mezzanine of the State. Perhaps they were renting or borrowing the unused Palace dressing rooms as additional office space since it was ajacent to the State’s offices. I don’t recall any offices or rooms that could be used as offices on the mezzanine of the Palace when I worked there in 1978 & 79, theirs were on the main floor off the east side of the main lobby.
I think this was pre-Rabakopf…maybe around 1958-59.
Interesting — both Cleveland and Columbus had both an ‘RKO Palace’ and a ‘Loew’s Ohio’.