Embassy 1,2,3 Theatre

707 7th Avenue,
New York, NY 10036

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William
William on June 15, 2007 at 11:32 am

It does not have a stage house. So it is very limited as to use as a Broadway house, for the size of the room. As a single screen movie theatre, the rent would make it unprofitable for the upgrades it needs. The owners know that the site can bring a large payoff if they raze the location for a building.

William
William on June 15, 2007 at 11:28 am

Well the lobby is gutted to the brick walls and most of the marble is gone. All the seats have been removed from the main floor. And everything has been stripped away so you can see the area where the screen once stood in front.

Hibi
Hibi on June 15, 2007 at 11:26 am

It’s so sad to see that no one is interested in saving this old warhorse that’s survived so long and is the last Times Square theater still in existence. Surely it could be converted to legit use?

William
William on June 15, 2007 at 8:55 am

Warren, thats about what I posted back on Oct. 4th, 2006. Because it’s the last large piece of Times Square left to build. Because if you look at the properties just to the north of the Embassy, it is just two story shops. And would be an easy demolition along with the Embassy property for a large building. Other than the Paramount Building and the building just south of the Palace Theatre. That’s it for building in the Times Square borders. That does not count those two tiny holdouts TGF Calvin Theatreth St. and the small building next to the Virgin Mega Store. But because of the rent and the amount of money needed to restore the theatre to a industry type screening theatre and bring it all back up to codes, it was all about money.
If the owners really wanted it back up and running as a theatre the owners would have worked a deal. But they did not. Our company looked in to it back in 2003.

DonRosen
DonRosen on June 15, 2007 at 4:45 am

Get those pictures!!!!!

HowardBHaas
HowardBHaas on June 14, 2007 at 2:14 pm

sounds like they could be gutting it.

nyc20022000
nyc20022000 on June 14, 2007 at 1:36 pm

I walked by the theater today and work was going on inside. I took a peek and saw that the main theater is still there in all its faded glory, but nothing a few million couldn’t fix. I’ll try and go back, this time with a camera. The work permit said non-load bearing walls were being taken down. Maybe the Shuberts bought the place and are converting it to legit use.

Coate
Coate on May 10, 2007 at 12:21 am

Just wanted to mention in case some of you aren’t aware that on the From Script To DVD website we have recently posted a historical reference list of Cinerama presentations in New York City. It includes entries for the Soviet 3-panel films that have been mentioned in a number of postings on this page.

http://www.fromscripttodvd.com/cinerama_nyc.htm

And don’t forget we also have a companion list for Cinerama presentations in Los Angeles.

http://www.fromscripttodvd.com/cinerama_la.htm

DamienB
DamienB on May 9, 2007 at 6:59 pm

The last time I was in the Embassy Triplex was in early 1991, finally seeing Ghost because I figured I had to since it was a Best Picture nominee. The ouutstanding aspect of going to the theatre was that the house kitty jumped up on my lap and spent a good half hour asleep on my lap. I wish every theatre had cats to interact with the patrons.

jamesburt
jamesburt on March 11, 2007 at 2:16 pm

I can probably answer two questions here

1 (Did the contractor create new dressing rooms?)

I estimate that he refurbished the dressing rooms that existed there when I was the triplex manager in 1982. There were several dressing rooms backstage, badly dilapidated and storing junk, but ready to be refurbished.

3 (Does the ornamentation remain)

I consider that probably the original ornamentation remains. The balcony was boxded in to create two theatres upstairs, but the original side walls and ceiling were retained. This resulted in a very incoherent look, as the new front wall upstairs was bare boring sheetrock, and the side walls and ceiling were ornamental, with mouldings and chandeliers. The downstairs theatre was entirely original on all walls.

Ed Solero
Ed Solero on March 3, 2007 at 4:37 am

Ha! “Scented movies are here to stay!” Hardly. One could probably count the number of “scented movies” released in the U.S. on a single hand. Last one I recall, was John Waters' campy “Polyester” in Odorama – a “process” that involved a simple scratch and sniff card with numerical cues flashed on the screen to tell the audience when to use the card.

veyoung52
veyoung52 on January 13, 2007 at 11:54 pm

Hi, Ed. I don’t remember much about the ornamental detail, but there was a mezzanine lounge, though I don’t recall that it was as elaborate as shown in the above picture.

ForgottenFan
ForgottenFan on January 13, 2007 at 9:36 pm

I am posting photos of the theater taken this month (January 2007). The view is facing north. I remember seeing movies in this theater in the early 1990s. Does anyone have photos of this theater from the early to mid-1990’s?

View link
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Ed Solero
Ed Solero on January 13, 2007 at 2:42 pm

Wow… I wonder if ANY of that ornamental detail survives behind false walls that might have been erected when the theater was triplexed! Was any of that stripped away in the ‘50’s, when several deluxe houses on Broadway were “modernized” for the widescreen roadshow era? And what of the mezzanine lounge depicted in the third photo… did it survive the years? This is one of a handful of Times Square theaters that I never made it into… so I have no personal recollections to go by at all.

Mikeoaklandpark
Mikeoaklandpark on January 10, 2007 at 7:44 am

Any chance there is of this theater opening?

janecascio
janecascio on December 27, 2006 at 6:17 am

Just a note here..
I attended the November 26,1971 solo concert by Melanie at the DeMille Theater.. and still have the Peter Max print that was handed out to the first hundred people who came..

mp775
mp775 on December 5, 2006 at 9:13 am

Apologies for responding to an almost three-year-old comment, but in response to Richard Dziadzio’s 3/12/04 post, I’d be happy to host your photos.

Ed Solero
Ed Solero on December 5, 2006 at 5:40 am

A Times article on October 22, 1930, preceded the one Lost Memory alludes to regarding the opening of the Mayfair. In the short blurb, it is revealed that the new theater would seat 2300 patrons and would be managed by Walter Reade. It also states that a policy of continuous performances would begin following the opening night festivities on October 31st.

The November 1 article by Mordaunt Hall – mostly a review of the Amos ‘n’ Andy film “Check and Double Check” – includes the following descriptive passage:

“It is a lavishly decorated, spacious theater with sparkling hangings, wonderfully comfortable seats, roomy aisles and an enormous proscenium arch. It has modernistic ideas in its architecture, with bronze, marble and sculptured plaster. Above the orchestra seats is a highly effective luminous dome. The auditorium, which includes the orchestra, loges and mezzanine, seats 2,300.”

The article goes on to praise the “special thermostatic control” with theater ventilation, cooling and heating controled by a turn of an “electric switch.” Further, “not a footfall could be heard on the thickly carpeted floor. The plush covered seats were very comfortable, and more than one tall man with long legs commented on the space in the cross aisles.”

As for the presentation itself… After the opening speech from Will Hayes and some introductions, “the house was darkened, and while the Stars and Stripes floated on a huge screen, said to be 22 by 24 feet, a baritone singer rendered ‘The Star Spangled Banner.’ Then came amusing and interesting newsreel topics and, wonder of wonders, there was no further delay in bringing ‘Check and Double Check’ to the same giant screen.”

William
William on October 4, 2006 at 4:37 am

If you look at Times Square as a whole, all the buildings from 42nd Street to 48th Street that border the Square. You will find just a few small pockets that have not changed. The last change was the closing and the soon tobe razed Howard Johnsons & former Globe Theatre facade. The only other property that’s left is the Embassy Theatre & building and those small stores just to the north of the theatre @ 48th.. So maybe the owner is waiting for that last large offer. Since office space is renting at large rates for square footage these days. The 1600 building came down fast for condos and there are two project over on 8th Ave @ 45th & 46th that are in the works now. Also look at the building that once was at 42nd where that British Airway concorde ad use tobe at. (between Broadway & 7th)

RobertEndres
RobertEndres on October 4, 2006 at 4:00 am

Perhaps the office space on two sides of the building in addition to the shops on the ground level generate enough revenue to make the owner in no hurry to sell. Remember, they added shops in the lobby area that go all the way to the back wall of the auditorium when they triplexed the space. Perhaps those in the offices have long-term leases as well. When I worked there I was always curious about what was in the office space above the booth, since it sounded at times as if there were a bowling alley up there.
I had another thought about the amount of stage space that I had forgotten. I was in the theatre when it was the DeMille for “Shoes of the Fisherman” a 70mm roadshow. I went up to the booth, and noted that the lighting panel was up there, not backstage. In addition to the two Local #306 projectionists, there was a Local #1 stagehand to bring the lights up and down, and presumably open and close the house curtain (assuming there wasn’t another stagehand doing it by hand backstage). That would indicate limited stage space backstage for a resistance type dimmer board. The only other theatre on Broadway that I can recall as having the same set-up with the light board in the booth was the Criterion. Even at Loew’s State 1 after the twinning, the stagehand operated the lights and curtain from backstage.

Ed Solero
Ed Solero on October 3, 2006 at 9:07 am

Thanks for that info, REndres. I didn’t realize that the owners had envisioned a porn triplex and strip club at the time! That would explain much, and you’re suspicions as to the nature of the backstage facilities are probably correct. And still the theater sits vacant awaiting a lessee. I wonder if the owner is still willing to talk long-term lease, as the rental agent indicated to me a year ago. I would think this corner lot would have been gobbled up and demolished for some high rise. The entire block front on Seventh Ave from 47th to 48th would seem to me to be almost irresistible to developers. You’d think the owner would be salivating at the chance to sell and talking 1 or 2 year leases, tops! As long as he holds out, I suppose, hope still exists that this theater might once again see some viability.

RobertEndres
RobertEndres on October 3, 2006 at 8:36 am

EdSolero, I was in the theatre when it was being triplexed and remember the contractor being very proud of the dressing room facilities he had made for the strippers who were supposed to perform. The house also had a runway down the middle (shades of the Columbia — everything old is new again!) When the city balked at having a porno triplex with a live show added to the plethora of porno operations already in existence at the time, the runway was removed and the theatre reverted to film. I remember standing on the stage trying to determine the maximum width of the screen image by looking at the projection port,and then walking left and right until it was blocked by the walls of the two upstairs theatres. As I recall, the stage wasn’t very deep, but deep enough for the girls to come out and work the runway. I don’t know whether the dressing rooms the contractor referred to were original, or whether he carved out an area for them backstage — I suspect the latter.

Ed Solero
Ed Solero on October 3, 2006 at 6:31 am

Thanks for that one, RobertR… particularly for the supporting feature. I’m a big fan of Hammer films and their Dracula series. This was the last of the original cycle of Christopher Lee films in that series which were all direct sequels to the 1958 “Horror of Dracula”. Later that year, Lee was in the standalone “Scars of Dracula” which appeared in American theaters on a double bill with a sort of black-comedy bit of revisionism entitled “Horror of Frankenstien”… any ads in your stash for that twin bill?

Also looking for ads for Lee’s last time in the cape, “Count Dracula and His Vampire Bride” which was released in late 1978 and was the film for which I was lured into the honky-tonk underworld of the Times Square and 42nd Street grind houses for the very first time.

RobertR
RobertR on October 3, 2006 at 6:02 am

Crawfords last film opened at the Demille for Halloween 1970
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