Clune's Auditorium
427 W. 5th Street,
Los Angeles,
CA
90071
427 W. 5th Street,
Los Angeles,
CA
90071
9 people favorited this theater
Showing 51 - 75 of 81 comments
This undated photo shows a different marquee:
http://jpg3.lapl.org/pics37/00068395.jpg
The advertisement on the top of the building is for a Las Vegas casino in this 1981 photo:
http://tinyurl.com/22tq8p
Here is an undated photo from the LAPL:
http://jpg3.lapl.org/pics35/00067384.jpg
Caro, I didn’t see your 4/23 post. That’s the building I was referring to above.
Redevelopment time. LA Times reports a megacondo complex to arise out of the ashes of the Philharmonic. As the downtown condo market is reaching saturation point, someone is missing the boat by proposing this 800 foot tall residential tower. My bet is that it won’t ever see the light of day.
That photo posted by Ken of the Tie store shows the parking lot where the former Metropolitan/Paramount Theater was prior to 1962.
Almost as tragic as tearing down Philharmonic Auditorium was the “makeover” the building had at some point during its life, removing all of its gothic facade and trimmings. That thing was beautiful! Reminds me of the Canadian Houses of Parliament.
There is finally some movement on a potential building for the parking lot that’s occupied this site since the mid-80’s: a 70-story (or taller) hotel/condominium project.
View link
Here’s an interesting 1973 photo. I guess the tie shop was handy if you were in urgent need of a cravat:
http://jpg3.lapl.org/pics35/00067402.jpg
After this theater was turned into a parking lot, a law was passed that if a building was torn down it had to be replaced with another building and not just a flat parking lot. At least that is what I was told on a LA Conservancy walking tour.
And what they did to that former park is an absolute crime!
Just viewed the Dec. 26th photo with glorious ceiling and couldn’t believe that this theatre/former church was TORN DOWN! Such a shame!
Thanks….will take a look-see.
I posted some interior photos last November, from the LAPL.
I would love to see interior photos of this former theatre with 2700 seats!
This December 1984 photo probably was close to the demolition date:
http://tinyurl.com/k4d9h
Here is another interesting photo from 1910:
http://tinyurl.com/jp32e
Here is a 1905 picture:
http://tinyurl.com/hfdjv
That’s interesting. I always understood that the park went downhill after the renovation in the fifties. Now I know to blame Travelin' Sam.
Ken: The first of those three photos certainly dates from the period just after the old State Normal School was demolished and just before the library was built. Fifth Street has not yet been connected between Grand and Flower. It looks as though it was under construction at the time the picture was taken. You can see that the hillside that later became the location of the big concrete wall has been partly graded.
Temple Baptist Church still owned the building at the time the second photo was taken, so they must have approved of the big Alka-Seltzer sign on the roof. It was the Philharmonic that was the tenant in the building.
Though it doesn’t look like it today, when Pershing Square was rebuilt following the construction of the underground garage the landscaping was quite pleasant. The large grassy section in the center featuring two fountains was off limits to the public, but the perimeter of the park featured both an inner and an outer walkway. The outer walkway was lined with planters whose walls were of a good height for sitting, and the inner walkway was lined with benches overlooking the central lawn, some of the bearing the quaint sign “Reserved for Ladies”. The place was busy all the time and, though many of the park’s regular denizens were of sorts thought by suburbanites to be unsavory, I was there many times and never felt in the least bit threatened by any of them (though I did frequently get panhandled and asked if I’d found Jesus yet.)
The planting was mostly tropical, with palms, banana trees and ferns, and the whole perimeter was quite lush and well shaded. This tropical landscape was lost to a bland renovation in the mid-1960s which was instigated by the administration of Mayor Sam Yorty, a resident of the San Fernando Valley who disliked the liveliness of downtown and did his best to destroy as many of its amenities as possible.
I guess if they were already advertising cars in 1928, the whole theological issue is a moot point:
http://jpg2.lapl.org/pics03/00011032.jpg
Here is the Pershing Square carnage that I mentioned above:
http://jpg2.lapl.org/pics03/00011017.jpg
I like this picture from 1951. Do you think the church had any reservations about putting the Alka Seltzer sign on the top of the building? If they were just tenants, which was most likely the case, they wouldn’t have had any standing to object:
http://jpg2.lapl.org/pics02/00010987.jpg
Here is an interesting aerial photo which includes the auditorium. The picture is undated, but it doesn’t look like the LA Library was built yet, dating it before 1926. I could be wrong but it looks like more cars are parked on the library space. That may actually be landscaping at the edge of the building.
You can see that the layout of Pershing Square was more attractive before they lopped off sections to put in underground parking in the 1950s:
http://jpg2.lapl.org/pics03/00011009.jpg
I understand your frustration ken. Today I went on the bus down Wilshire and saw that big hole where Coulter’s was and then saw the shell of the Cocoanut Grove…the Ambassador is completely gone along with all of the bungalows…pretty disgusting. Also, I live one block from where the Carthay Circle Theater was and have to look at the ugly twin office buildings that replaced the theater and its grounds almost every day.
I don’t think people realize the loss to a city when something like this theater is torn down, with nothing to replace it. Why do we have to look at a multi-acre parking lot for the next thirty years due to someone else’s shortsightedness? Another example is Coulter’s Department Store on Wilshire Boulevard, which was torn down in 1980 and remains a large hole in the ground as of today. Very sad.