Loew's Star Theatre
71-77 S. Clinton Avenue,
Rochester,
NY
14604
71-77 S. Clinton Avenue,
Rochester,
NY
14604
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Lowes Star Theater had become the home of the Rochester Gospel Center by early 1923. By the summer of 1924, the Rochester Gospel Center moved to RBI (Rochester Business Institute which, five decades later, was the first home of Geva). See Rochester Gospel Center ads in the Democrat and Chronicle 7/5/1924 p. 17, article 6/23/1924 p. 21
In the current market fifteen or twenty is not unusual.
The entrance to the RKO Palace and its associated three-story office and commercial building were on the site of Loew’s Star. The Star must have been demolished by early 1928. It’s remarkable that this large, substantial theater stood for only fifteen years or so.
February 16th, 1913 grand opening ad as Gordon as well as the September 12th,1920 grand opening ad as Loew’s Star can be found in the photo section for this theatre.
Something happened to this lovely theater in early 1922. A search on “Old Fulton” of ‘photoplay" listings in the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle shows Lowe’s Star screening movies through March 1922, along with the other Downtown Rochester movie theaters of the time (Victoria, Regent, Piccadilly, Rialto and Strand, and then, starting April 1922, it simply drops off. There are a few announcements of religious events at the theater in 1923-1925 and then that’s it.
The 1926 plat map of Rochester http://photo.libraryweb.org/rochimag/rpm/rpm00077.htm shows the Michael Stern building at the southwest corner of North Clinton and Pleasant Street, the old Masonic Temple at the northwest corner of North Clinton and Mortimer Street, and the Star Theater located between them. Looking at the picture of The Star, you can see the Michael Stern building to its right (that building still stands, as loft apartments).
The 1935 plat map of Rochester http://photo.libraryweb.org/rochimag/rpm/rpm00465.htm shows an empty parking lot where the Masonic Temple was, and a building to the north that appears to be a replacement (a seven story building now stands adjacent to the Michael Stern building, at 79 North Clinton Avenue). The map marks the lot as owned by the RKO Palace. The actual Palace theater is to the west, on Mortimer Street, so the Palace was not built on the site of the Star.
Not surprisingly, Rochester’s own Leon H. Lempert, Jr. designed Gordon’s Photoplay Theatre. Here is an item from the June 26, 1912, issue of The American Architect:
The March 26, 1913, issue of The New York Dramatic Mirror ran this description of Gordon’s Photoplay:If the information on this website is correct about this theater, Loew’s operated this theater from 1920 to 1926. Schine’s Rochester opened in 1927, so what Tinseltoes speculates essentially makes sense, depending on when Loew’s took over the Rochester from Schine; Loew’s was operating the Rochester at least as of 1930.
The information also indicates that the 1928 RKO Palace was built approximately on the site occupied by Gordon’s/Loew’s Star. Perhaps someone made Loew’s an offer they could not refuse on the Gordon’s property (or perhaps Loew’s only leased Gordon’s), so there may have been a short or long gap in time before the Loew’s name appeared on a theater in Rochester.
Escalators were “born” around 1900.
Boy I’d like to see pictures of this. Escalators in 1913. Wonder what this all would have cost in today’s dollars. Great background info, but how long did it last? Certainly must be more out there.