Princess Theatre
21 E. 7th Street,
St. Paul,
MN
55101
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Additional Info
Previously operated by: Finkelstein & Ruben
Architects: Mark Fitzpatrick
Styles: Beaux-Arts
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The Princess Theatre was notable because it was the first theatre of the Finkelstein & Ruben chain of movie houses, which would eventually be comprised of almost 150 theaters not only in the Twin Cities and Minnesota, but also the Dakotas and Wisconsin, as well.
The Princess Theatre was built in 1909, at a cost of over $50,000 by architect Mark Fitzpatrick, and seat around 800. The theatre’s Beaux-Arts facade, of ornate terra cotta, stained glass and a simple-but-elegant iron and glass canopy marquee brought a feel of sophistication to E. 7th Street. Early newspaper advertisements boasted the Princess Theatre was “the safest, coolest and best ventilated theatre in the state”.
Opening night including three vaudeville acts and short and feature length movies.
Two years after opening, Finkelstein & Ruben added a 400-seat balcony and twelve boxes, bringing the Princess Theatre total seating to over 1,200, due to the increased popularity of the theatre. However, the Princess Theatre was already becoming outdated by the mid-1920’s, and was closed in 1926. Five years later, it was torn down.
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Recent comments (view all 2 comments)
I have a 1911 photo of a Princess in St. Cloud, MN. I’m wondering if that was a typo, and it should have been St. Paul.
A postcard image of St Pauls’s 7th street along with a view of the Princess Theatre’s sign.