Jewel Theatre

904 NE 4th Street,
Oklahoma City, OK 73104

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dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters on January 5, 2023 at 4:00 pm

Posted in photos is the September 12, 1931 grand opening ad for the Jewel Theatre. Pioneering African American showpersons Hathyel L. James and Percy H. “PH” James operated both this venue and the Ardmore Jewel Theater for African American patrons. Mr. and Mrs. Clinton A. Newton took on the venue in January of 1954 and would convert it to widescreen to present CinemaScope titles.

VHart
VHart on July 3, 2012 at 10:48 am

For more information about the Jewel Theatre or Jewel Foundation you can go to the website at jeweltheatre.webs.com!!! We are having a Blues Festivals to help raise funds for the theatre you can find all the details on the website!!!

VHart
VHart on May 8, 2012 at 8:21 am

The Jewel Theatre is now owned by Arthur Hurst. The Jewel Foundation is helping to remodel the building and turn it back into a working movie and play theatre. For more information or help please email me at !!! We are excited about the progess already being made, we are currently rasing and accepting money for a new roof!!! If anyone has any type of pictures of the building from 1930s to 1970s PLEASE contact me!!! Thank you all!!!

pomb98
pomb98 on May 9, 2011 at 11:59 pm

Is the theatre still owned by the James family? I’d like to take a look at it and see if it can be renovated and re-opened. Any info on who currently owns it?

missmelbatoast
missmelbatoast on March 30, 2011 at 2:33 am

As early as 1957 Oklahoma City had a black radio station, KBYE (AM-890). To look at a downtown rooftop billboard advertisement for station KBYE go to link below and type in “katz 1957”
View link

Silicon Sam
Silicon Sam on March 23, 2011 at 11:57 pm

Interesting link Cosmic Ray posted. In the Street View there is 3 buildings in a row, with the Jewel in the center of the 3. Pan out to satellite view, and there is only the Jewel remaining standing.

raybradley
raybradley on March 23, 2011 at 11:33 pm

On this link pan around the corner on Laird Ave. to see just how incredibly long the Jewel auditorium is,
View link

TLSLOEWS
TLSLOEWS on July 17, 2010 at 5:01 pm

Maybe someone was going to reopen the theatre and it fell through.

seymourcox
seymourcox on July 17, 2010 at 4:26 pm

On this great web site are recent shots of the abandoned Jewel Theatre, only building remaining on the block.
1970’s views show a Jewel with marquee gone. Wonder who put the old marquee back up, and why?
http://www.roadsideoklahoma.com/node/537

SoonerGrad74
SoonerGrad74 on April 10, 2010 at 10:24 pm

The Jewel as of April 2010 View link

Delrenad
Delrenad on March 24, 2010 at 10:43 pm

In response to the above post as Step-Granddaughter to Percy Harold James, Sr..there are members of Mr. James', family still alive. The children of his first wife, Jewel Hythel (Hattie). JEWEL, his oldest daughter, has a daughter living in Anchorage, AK. Her name is also Jewel. PERCY JAMES, Jr. has three sons (Percy III, Roland, and Leon) that are still living, and ROLAND, his youngest son has children still living in Denver, CO.

wijames
wijames on November 20, 2009 at 12:13 am

I’m responding to the above post as a nephew of my Uncle Percy H. James to clarify some of the statements in the above posts. My uncle remained married to his second wife Arvella Gamble up until his death in November, 1965. The family moved to a new home in 1960 from N.E. 9th however, the bottling plant remained in the same location until it was demolished by Urban Renewal. The site is presently occupied by the Oklahoma Heath Science Center.

No members of the immediate family are alive today. The last son from my Uncle first marriage to Hattie died in July, 2009. The only child from my Uncle second marriage died in 2005.

The Jewel Theater is the only building standing on the block and remains boarded. To my knowledge the building is not being maintained which is amazing that the Jewel Theater marque still remains still vibrant.

The Oklahoma History Center in Oklahoma City houses several artifacts from the Theater which includes the project. There are are also bottles from Jay-Cola Bottling. The Museum has also offered so really beautiful t-shirts with the Jay-Cola logo.

Joe Vogel
Joe Vogel on November 10, 2009 at 2:12 am

The Oklahoma City column of Boxoffice, September 17, 1938, says this: “…a Negro house, the Jewel, 400 seater at Ardmore, being opened by P. H. James who also operates the new Jewel, Negro house, here….” That’s the earliest mention of James or the Jewel I’ve found in Boxoffice.

A brief notice of the death of P. H. James appeared in the Oklahoma City column of Boxoffice, November 15, 1965: “P. H. James, former operator of the Jewell Theatres here and in Ardmore, died in a nursing home. He also had owned and operated the Jay-Kola Bottling Co. Survivors include the wife, two daughters, two sons, a brother and one sister.”

lrostochil
lrostochil on January 23, 2009 at 2:19 pm

Here’s a photo of what the theater looks like today.

http://flickr.com/photos/25726169@N03/3219937539/

lrostochil
lrostochil on January 23, 2009 at 12:37 pm

This theater was one of four Jewel Theaters built by Percy H. James(the others were in Amarillo, Ardmore, and Wewoka). All of the theaters were named after James' daughter, Jewel, and served African-American communities during the days of segregation.

The Jewel Theater in OKC was built sometime in the 30’s, I believe. The first mention I find of it in the Daily Oklahoman archives is on March 26, 1937, when an inspector had to cut off the theater’s heating system because it was practically identical to the one used at the New London, Texas school that exploded the week before, killing over 400 teachers and children.

I know that the theater thrived through the 1960’s, but I find no mention of it in the archives after the 1980’s. However, the sign is still in good condition, so I think that, although the building is boarded up, someone is still taking care to preserve it until it can be reopened.

As for Percy James, he was quite a figure in OKC’s history. In the early 20’s, he worked for the Coca-Cola Bottling Plant and was befriended by the plant’s manager, who told James that he should start his own plant because Coca-Cola was not allowed to serve the African-American community. So, in 1926, James opened the Jay Kola Bottling Plant in NE OKC and quickly became a prominent leader in the community, which was called Deep Deuce. He built the four theaters and also built buildings in NE OKC that housed a hotel, restaurant, pool hall, and dress shop.

Percy also owned a grand home behind the bottling plant that he shared with his first wife Hattie, and their daughter, Jewel. Hattie and Percy divorced in 1940, and he soon married Avelia. They, too, divorced in 1948. I found another divorce for him in 1960 (Lurena was that wife), but I’m not sure if maybe this was our Percy or maybe his son.

James moved the bottling plant to a new location in 1963 and retired two years later due to illness. The plant shut down soon afterward. I couldn’t find an obituary for him, so I don’t know when he died. but I do know that his home and the original bottling plant were torn down during urban renewal, and a housing development was built on the site in the 80’s.

I’m going to post the photos I took of the Jewel Theater on Flickr and will link them here.

Rodney
Rodney on April 28, 2008 at 1:51 pm

There are photos of the (ruined) Jewel Theatre on the Cinema Tour

Ken Roe
Ken Roe on July 6, 2005 at 1:58 pm

With various seating capacities given as between 325 and 500, the Jewel Theater is listed in Film Daily Yearbooks 1940-1955 as operating as a Negro theatre.