Guild 50th Street Theater
33 W. 50th Street,
New York,
NY
10020
14 people favorited this theater
Additional Info
Previously operated by: Newsreel Theaters Inc., Trans-Lux Movies Corp.
Architects: John Adolph Emil Eberson
Functions: Retail
Styles: Art Deco
Previous Names: Newsreel Theater, Embassy Newsreel Theater
Nearby Theaters
The Guild Theater opened on December 2, 1938 as a newsreel house, with an entrance on the south side of Radio City Music Hall in the Associated Press Building. Furniture was designed by Finnish designer Alvar Aalto, and aisle carpeting had a motif of ‘unwinding movie reels’ in an Art Deco style.
The Rockefeller Center landmark was later taken over by the Trans-Lux circuit in 1949. Operating under successive 25 year leases, when the most recent term expired in 1999, the Guild 50th Street Theatre was closed on September 26, 1999 with Julia Roberts in “Runaway Bride” and it was gutted.
After first becoming a Nautica retail store, it is now occupied by the clothing chain Anthropologie, which is primed for the millions of tourists who pass by the area.
The marquee of the Guild 50th Theater remains, though little other evidence exists that a theater once entertained moviegoers.
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Recent comments (view all 102 comments)
Good footage from 1989 of outside & inside this theater from Late Show with David Letterman. http://youtu.be/P8OnsEeZA-M
I don’t see a link in any of the earlier comments to the January 7, 1939, Boxoffice article by Helen Kent about Rockefeller Centers then-new Newsreel Theatre.
Page one has photos of the exterior and the auditorium.
Page twohas photos of the lounge and Lobby.
The Guild premiered the now-classic Japanese film “Gate of Hell" in the 1950s. It played there for quite a long run, and its rich color photography was exhibited in full display on the Guild’s screen. It was also the theater where the Peter Sellers film “The Mouse that Roared” premiered. The Guild was a classic movie theater in the heart of Manhattan, which, like the Sutton, is now lost to time.
What sound systems did this theater use?
Hello-
it certainly had one of the classiest most well appointed men’s rooms.
Probably because it was part of Rockefeller Center.
It was the sweetest sh!thouse in town…
Theatre closed on September 30, 1999 with Runaway Bride. A few different ads in photos section.
Please correct, theatre closed September 26, 1999, see article in photos section
I loved this theater. When “My Fair Lady” ended its run at the Criterion it moved to the Guild for several more months. It was the first film I saw there and I remember being impressed with the sound.