Apollo Theatre

223 W. 42nd Street,
New York, NY 10036

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Showing 126 - 133 of 133 comments

42ndStreetMemories
42ndStreetMemories on December 30, 2004 at 2:19 pm

Nice shot of the Apollo & Lyric from the 40s at View link Jerry 42nd Street Memories

42ndStreetMemories
42ndStreetMemories on December 28, 2004 at 5:06 am

I remember visiting the Lyric quite frequently in the 50s/60s. As Warren stated, it did have the 1st 42nd St showings after a film had a Broadway run, as did the New Amsterdam on the south side. The Lyric, being an old legit theater had 3 levels and seeing a movie from the top level was a trip. You were looking down on the screen through the haze of the rising cigarette smoke. Last week, the Travel Channel was showing a hour program on Times Square. It included shots of the Lyric & Apollo from the 70s. If anyone knows where I can see photos, images, etc of the 42nd Street Theaters in the 50s-60s, please let me know. Jerry 42nd Street Memories

RobertR
RobertR on November 21, 2004 at 8:43 am

I know this corporate sponsor naming brings in some much needed cash, but It’s vulgar. At least calmer heads prevailed and the Winter Garden was able to keep it’s original name with Cadillac tacked in the front. The city has now announced it wants to sell corporate naming of subway stops like Xerox 18th Street and Summers Eve Delancy Street.

henryval77
henryval77 on November 2, 2004 at 9:51 am

What is the quote that is written downstairs by the ladies' bathroom?
It is written by Ford and I don’t remember it, can somebody help me?

br91975
br91975 on June 15, 2004 at 7:05 pm

Yes, that’s the same Lyric Theatre, Todd.

Todd
Todd on June 15, 2004 at 2:21 pm

Is this the same Lyric Theater that Deniro’s character takes Cybil Sheppard into to see the porn film in the Movie ‘Taxi Driver’?

Todd
Todd on March 29, 2004 at 1:39 pm

Does anyone know the significance of the women in the top corners of the facade? I was recently in the city and noticed that the facade is extremely similar to the Garden Theatre in Charleston, SC. They are obviously both Beaux arts/neo-classical style-but what’s the background on the women?

Gerald A. DeLuca
Gerald A. DeLuca on March 16, 2004 at 2:01 am

The Apollo 42nd Street was much more than a “grind run” house. Perhaps the term “grind run art house” would be more accurate. For decades it ran double bills of recent and older foreign-language films. Sometimes movies that didn’t get an opening in an art house “of class” found their way here. Films shelved by distributors occasionally got aired here. The premiere of Franco Rossi’s wonderful THE WOMAN IN THE PAINTING (“Friends for Life”) took place here in 1959 and was reviewed by the New York Times. I remember walking by the theatre in the 60s and noticing a revival double bill was playing of Rossellini’s WOMAN along with Vittorio Gassman in SHAMED. I am a lover of Italian films, but I had to leave the city and could not stay to see this program of revived Italian rarities. WOMAN was really “Desiderio”; SHAMED was “Preludio d'amore.” I have since seen DESIDERIO, but never PRELUDIO D'AMORE. Damn! But, the point is, the Apollo 42nd Street showed stuff like this and much more…and they were open about 20 hours per day.