Fox Theatre

527 N. Grand Boulevard,
St. Louis, MO 63103

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Showing 101 - 125 of 157 comments

Chris Utley
Chris Utley on June 29, 2007 at 7:22 pm

I would LOVE to see pictures of this joint from the 70’s when it was limping away on a steady diet of Blaxploitation flicks! All of my family members have stories of going to The Fox during those days but I was a bit too young to go with them. Although I may have gone there as a baby.

If you’ve got ‘em, post 'em!

melders
melders on January 9, 2007 at 10:43 pm

Does anyone know why the all records say the Fox was added to the National Register in 1976, but the playbills from the Fox all claim it was added in 1987. Is there some reason, or do the Fox people just have it mixed up?

TravisCape
TravisCape on June 9, 2006 at 9:15 am

I was so excited to hear about the new marquee until I saw it. It has a large griffin ornament hanging on both corners. It looks like it’s straight out of a Disney cartoon.

Also, they didn’t replace the vertical. If it had one more letter it could double as a PARK sign.

JimRankin
JimRankin on June 9, 2006 at 6:41 am

All of the big movie palaces —and most of the smaller ones— had “walkways” like the one described above called “Catwalks” They were indeed used to access the indirect lighting and chandelier winches and were often spooky journeys in the ill-lit vastness of the multi-story heights between the auditorium ceiling and the roof where there were no windows. In the larger theatres, some architects specified concrete catwalks with steel strap railings, but in many lower budgeted houses it was a few boards just set upon the trusses with nary a railing in sight! Not every workman was as surefooted as the rest, as a scar in the repaired ceiling of the SOUTHTOWN in Chicago testified to the puncture of it by the body of a man who stepped off the catwalk, showed as he fell to his death upon the seats below.

Theatres have many fascinating areas not found in other buildings, but often dangerous ones! The FOX was blessed to have two ways to get to the booth (actually a large Projection Room suite of rooms); most theatres had but one way, and if it were blocked by fire, there was often only the window to crawl through and one hoped for a sturdy fire escape nearby.

GWaterman
GWaterman on June 8, 2006 at 7:44 pm

I played the Fox a couple of times with touring shows. One of the interesting things about the house is that – in addition to the usual route of climbing up through the public areas and balcony – access to the projection/spotlight booth can be had by taking the dressing room elevator up and entering the top part of the auditorium in front of the stage left side of the proscenium. There is a walkway around the top of the auditorium —– I guess it provides access to the indirect lighting. Anyway – you can walk all around the top of the auditorium, behind the decorative plaster, and get to the booth via that walkway.

Makes it a lot quicker and easier to get to your position by show-time, but also, it’s awesome to be able to be that close to the chandelier and dome, and survey the entire auditorium from that vantage point!

William
William on May 3, 2006 at 12:51 pm

The Fox Theatre opened on Jan. 31st, 1929.

melders
melders on March 14, 2006 at 10:41 pm

I recently found pics of the new marquee. I was disapointed because I thought they where replacing the vertical marquee, but it was just the lower marquee. The new one appears to have a digital screen on the sidewalk side.

melders
melders on November 28, 2005 at 12:46 am

Did the Fox ever get its new marquee?

JamesGrebe
JamesGrebe on October 14, 2005 at 5:23 am

The Majestic in East St. Louis was similar to the St. Louis Granada facade. The organ , Wurli 2m\8r, originaly a 2/6), now a 2m/10r, from the Majestic is in the Fox lobby. A name used in the 50’s for the Majestic was, “The House of Blue Lights,” used as a night club. Norm Kraemer bought the organ from the Majestic owners and lastly belongs to the St. Louis ATOS.
Jim

Patsy
Patsy on October 13, 2005 at 5:30 pm

lostmemory: The photo on your Sept. 21st post is fantastic. The lighting really shows of the brass doors! Doesn’t the RCMH Christmas Spectacular come to this theatre?

Patsy
Patsy on October 13, 2005 at 5:28 pm

I was just reading about another theatre in St. Louis called the Majestic which is in East St. Louis. It’s facade is cathedral-like and should be a restoration project, but it may just be too late for this one!

JimRankin
JimRankin on September 24, 2005 at 9:52 am

There is a new site with many fine photos of the interior details of the FOX by photographer and stagehand, Noah Kern: http://www.pbase.com/affablebeef/stlouis
You may leave comments there regarding the individual photos or the entire theatres of this and the many other theatres there pictured. Let him know how fine you think his photos to be.

bruceanthony
bruceanthony on September 1, 2005 at 3:09 pm

It would be nice if the rooftop sign could be restored. The Orpheum in LA restored there rooftop sign a few years ago and its spectacular. The Orpheum in LA doesn’t have the funds that the Fox in St. Louis has. It would help light up the theatre/arts district of St. Louis which is needed. Im very happy to hear that they are restoring the Fox marquee which will be a much needed improvement to the exterior.brucec

boxcarbob
boxcarbob on August 19, 2005 at 12:46 pm

For those of you interested in the Fox Marquee I have good news. The current marquee has been removed and will be replaced with a new one – in the style of the original! I will post details when I get them. I was able to watch the old marguee being removed last week and later passed it on the back of a semi being hauled away. As far as the rooftop sign goes, sorry but no plans are in the works to restore it to its former glory…Yet!

sdoerr
sdoerr on August 13, 2005 at 11:51 pm

Something to note (if not said already),

The only way the Fox auditorium differs from the one here in Detroit is that Detroit’s Fox has a support column at the South East end of the balcony. This was because Detroit’s Fox has an attached office building thus needed the extra support.

I have heard when the Fox in St.Louis opened, the photo in newspapers was actually the Fox in Detroit. They must have thought they looked the same, but that support column was there.

rmpereira
rmpereira on June 27, 2005 at 3:06 pm

I get a very proud feeling when I read the glowing remarks about the Fox interior. My grandfather was the interior designer of the Detroit Fox, the twin of St. Louis. He was considered an acoustical genius, in his day. He also had a magical sense of imagination, as displayed in the Fox.
When he retired he gave all his drawings to my father who stored them in our garage in Detroit. When the drawings were made for the Fox, drafting paper had not been invented. Architectural drawings were made with India ink on starched linen. When my mother wanted a dust cloth she would send my brother to the garage and have him wash out an old drawing. Unfortunately, I am sure a lot of the Fox drawings ended up as poor dust clothes or polishing rags.
My grandfather lived out his later years in Midland,Michigan where he became friends with Eldon Dow of Dow Chemical.

Kafgren
Kafgren on June 23, 2005 at 3:27 pm

Love the site, especially the great technical information on the Fox in St.Louis.

I was a fifteen-year old who, with great trepidation, attended the infamous world premiere of “The French Line” with several similarly Jane Russell-obsessed adolescents that January, 1954, Saturday night.

I even remember the double-bill feature, “Crazylegs,” the semi-documentary saga of Leroy Hirsch of the LA Rams. We made up the allibi, in case we got caught transgressing the severe condemnation of the Archdiocese of St.Louis, that we went to the Fox that night to appreciate Leroy’s legs rather than Jane’s.

Fortunately, we didn’t need this lame story. Don’t bother with the sanitized version of the movie. The original that night was in 3-D, and it delivered on the promise, “She’ll knock BOTH your eyes out!”

I noticed the other day Jane had her 84th birthday, bless her heart, but the image of her I’ll always carry was engendered that night at the Fabulous Fox.

boxcarbob
boxcarbob on June 1, 2005 at 12:55 pm

Thank you for your kind comments. I am very happy to be able to say that the Fox has already asked us (like they even NEEDED to ask) if we will premiere our next documentary about the Gateway Arch there in 2006 – Of course the answer is an enthusiastic “YES” and we are honored to do so!

JimRankin
JimRankin on June 1, 2005 at 11:58 am

Dear Mr. Miano, you have a wonderful memory there and it is generous of you to share it with those of us who can only imagine how great and unforgetable is must have been to stare out from that stage into that imensity of applauding people in that magnificent place! May you have many more years there and perhaps another evening of that filled-house magic. From one theatre devotee to another: BRAVO!

boxcarbob
boxcarbob on May 31, 2005 at 11:03 pm

One of the greatest thrills of my life, and I sincerely mean this, was having our documentary about the 1904 World’s Fair premiere at the Fabulous Fox Theatre in St. Louis in the summer of 2004. We sold out the theater (now slightly less than 4500 seats) and I was amazed to see crowds stretched around the block in each direction before the show. Everything about that night was better than I could have imagined in my wildest dreams. Being back stage at the Fox was a real treat (BTW, they offer tours to the general public and I’m told Stan Kann sometimes shows up during a tour to play the Mighty Wurlitzer). The walls are painted with artwork from the various musicals that have played there – signed by cast members – along with caricatures of some of the stars who have graced its stage. I felt like a real “big shot” being able to use the main dressing room to prepare before the movie began. Waiting behind the curtain with my co-director and the Mayor of St. Louis, about to step out and stand before a crowd at this amazing theatre, is a feeling I will cherish the rest of my life. Words can not adequately express how privileged I feel to have something I worked on shown at such a marvelous, historic theatre.

Bob Miano, Director
www.civilpictures.org
www.theworldsgreatestfair.com

bumberchute
bumberchute on April 10, 2005 at 2:45 pm

Anyone interested in seeing a filmed segment on the Fox St. Louis, rent the documentary, “Hail, Hail, Rock & Roll” for Chuck Berry’s tour of the theater with storytelling about how as a child he was denied a ticket to the theater in his hometown only to return to play there for this special performance many years later as a celebrated musician. The concert in the film was shot at the Fox. Features Keith Richards, Bruce Springsteen, Eric Clapton, Little Richard, Jerry Lee Lewis and others. Don’t know if it’s available on DVD, but the VHS version is available. Blockbuster may carry it.
View link

MarlinMackley
MarlinMackley on April 4, 2005 at 9:34 pm

After Jim Grebe asked my several questions about the Fox I decided to have a look myself at your site, and I am impressed! I worked on the Fox Wurlitzer for 20 years 2 months and watched the restoration of the theater from before the work started. I am really busy at the moment but as time permits I would be happy to share many of the hundreds of photos of the building and organ, and also stories of the restoration. I hope to soon have my web career history up and running on my web site, www.studio4-17.com , which will have some of the Fox stuff on it. I am also in the early stages of writing a book on the project, but that will have to wait for my first book to be finished.
Keep up the good work!
Marlin Mackley

JamesGrebe
JamesGrebe on April 1, 2005 at 7:27 am

According to my friend, Marlin Mackley, who refurbed the 4m/36r from the time the Strauss’s got the building in the 80’s til about 2 years ago there was not another organ or console in the building in the screening room. The slave console was already gone when Marlin arrived on the scene.
James Grebe

Ziggy
Ziggy on March 15, 2005 at 1:26 pm

Unfortunately in this great land of ours (and I DO love the U.S., so please don’t get me wrong on that statement) the bottom line is all that most people care about. The reason that the Ambassador was torn down for a driveway is likely that the property taxes for a driveway were considerably less.

melders
melders on March 15, 2005 at 12:37 pm

If the land the Ambassador sat on was so valueable, why was it replaced with a driveway? It was only torn down because the bank next door was tired of looking at it.