Teatro Marti
420 SW 8th Avenue,
Miami,
FL
33130
420 SW 8th Avenue,
Miami,
FL
33130
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Hi and Hello
History and Memories AM JHS
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_LKZ8_5Sy4
https://plus.google.com/u/0/104058891525336823421
Please check it out I hope you enjoy it. thanks armando
Ada Merritt Junior High School
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Wt2EObc5tA
Great website on the history of Miami Cuban Exile theatre.
http://scholar.library.miami.edu/miamitheater/introduction.html
I just met his stepson last Christmas here in NYC where he is an actor. I will ask him the next time I see him.
Here is a November 1937 article about the activities of the Miami Ku Klux Klan:
View link
And responding to them.
Sorry about that, it was a duplicate. Both of these entries can be deleted.
Here is a 1981 photo:
http://tinyurl.com/o9wsvk
It looks like there are all kinds of things going on in this building. I noted a Hispanic church, a Hindu church, a comedy club and a few other things. Here is a 1981 photo:
http://tinyurl.com/cemxm3
Al,
The neighborhood was little Havana before the assasination. Riverside Elementary, Ada Merit Jr. High, and Miami High were the schools where spanish speaking teachers were hired to handle the kids that came from Cuba. Technically speaking, Cubans were segregated into what is known as Little Havana. This segregation took place due to the anticipated language barriers that were going to become reality once the larger numbers of people came to Miami. Most don’t know this because it wasn’t a racial thing, but the fact is that Cubans were segregated and that is how the SW area became what it is.
The theatres of the area, The Tivoli, and The Tower became the “spanish speaking” theatres, hence the movies and live shows you have posted about. In addition, places such as Miami Stadium became venues for larger audiences and Anti-Castro demonstrations. There is a film, “White Elephant”, that brings some of this history into view. I haven’t seen it, but it did have a limited engagement at The Tower a couple of years ago.
Teatro Marti had a late start given that it was founded in 1971, which was a good 10 years after the Cubans started coming to the US. The majority of Cubans came to Miami, but some went to Key West, Tampa, Clewiston, West Palm Beach, and Union City New Jersey. The smallest numbers were in Clewiston and West Palm, these were the Cubans who were involved in the sugar business. Key West as well as Tampa had much more influence, but a good portion of that influence was due to the Havana Key West Tampa cigar trade days, which were pre-revolution. Mind you the rum runners were also plentiful, although these colorful characters are rarely spoken about, they played a critical role in the Cuban influence on Key West, but mostly Tampa. This is why you do not see any theatres in the WPB and Clewiston areas that evolved in the manner that the Tivoli and Tower theatres did. I haven’t researched Tampa theatres.
Union City is another story. The Tony Theatre in Bergen Line, what I call the equivalent of SW 8th Street, is or was a theatre that evolved just like the Tower and Tivoli theatres of Miami. I haven’t looked up the Tony Theatre, hadn’t thought of it! I should see if it is listed on Cinema Treasures.
BTW, you should list the Hippodrome. You have such a wealth of information about all these theatres that we never knew existed. It’s always a pleasure to read your fascinating posts.
I wondered about dates myself since I went to Ada Merritt Junior High in the late sixties. I suspect the KKK left when the neighborhood became Little Havana, but they were suspects in the JFK assassination in 1963 and may have left soon after.
Al,
I had no idea the KKK had an office in the Riverside area. That is very interesting, but funny at the same time. What year did the “KKK club house” close?