Stocking Avenue Theatre
634 Stocking Avenue NW,
Grand Rapids,
MI
49504
634 Stocking Avenue NW,
Grand Rapids,
MI
49504
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The Stocking Theatre closed at the end of its second 20-year lease on December 2, 1956 with “Abbott and Costello Meet the Mummy,” “Love Happy” and Walt Disney’s Musicland."
Closed or ended its listings in 1956.
The earliest mention I’ve found of plans for the Stocking Avenue Theatre are this item from The Moving Picture World of September 4, 1915:
An October 9 item in the same journal said that Brown had received a permit for construction of the house.This web page has a brief biography of architect Pierre Lindhout. It says that there were once eleven theaters of his design in Grand Rapids and claims that the Wealthy Theatre “…is the sole surviving example of this work.” As the Stocking Avenue Theatre’s building is still standing, the authors of the page must mean that the Wealthy is the only theater of Lindhout’s design that is fully intact and still in operation.
The comment above about the Stocking Theater closing in 1950 is incorrect. It was open, as a theater, at least into the mid 1950s. We went to the Stocking often when we lived at 309 Third St. in the 1950s.
I have a 12" ruler from Brown’s Stocking Ave. Theatre On the front it also has “We (Always) Have the Best in Photoplays” and on the back it has “Cor. Stocking Ave. and Fourth St. and another line that has "The Home of the $30,000 Page Grande Pipe Organ”
A brief biography of Edward N. Brown,original owner of Brown’s Stocking Avenue Theatre, says that he built the house in 1916. Earlier, he had been one of the original partners in the Alcazar Theatre, and had then opened the Fulton Theatre.
The theatre ran a radio show in the early to mid 30’s. I guess one could come in and sing in front of a studio audience. My mom woulld often sing and receive free tickets to the theatre as payment. That was a treat as not too many people had money in those hard times. Butternut bread was the sponsor and participants would get a miniature loaf of bread as an added incentive for singing. My mom loved to sing, and I guess she was quite good. She told me that young girls would often sing for free tickets. 1st, 2nd and 3rd prizes were tickets. The higher places received more tickets. No money was given out.
Brown’s Stocking Avenue Theatre is listed at this address in the 1922 Grand Rapids City Directory.
It probably shouldn’t say in the intro that the theater is gone. That’s what I was confused about.
A web search for “Marc Stewart’s Guest House” indicates that it is not a B&B but a catering/banquet hall and that weddings, fund raisers, jazz brunches, etc. are and have have been held there. It suggests that the theater was converted for this purpose.
It still shows up as the guest house in the map photo. Has it been demolished since that photo was taken?