Fourteenth Street Theatre
Coordinates: 40°44′16″N 73°59′50″W / 40.737779°N 73.997304°W
The Fourteenth Street Theatre was a New York City theatre located at 107 West 14th Street just west of Sixth Avenue.[1] It was designed by Alexander Saeltzer and opened in 1866 as the Theatre Francais, as a home for French language dramas and opera.[2]
The theatre was renamed the Lyceum in 1871. When J.H. Haverly took it over in 1879, he had renamed it Haverly's 14th Street Theatre. By the mid-1880s, it had become simply the Fourteenth Street Theatre.[3]
By the mid 1910s it was being used as a movie theatre, until actress Eva Le Gallienne turned it into the Civic Repertory Theater in 1926. She mounted a number of successful productions, but the Great Depression ended that venture in 1934.[4]
The building was demolished in 1938.[5][6]
References
Notes
- ↑ Berg, J.C. (9 January 2011). The Fourteenth Street Theater, nycvintageimages.com
- ↑ Fisher, Hames and Londré, Felicia Hardison. "Modernism" in The A to Z of American Theater Rowman & Littlefield, 2009. ISBN 0-8108-6884-9. pp.180-81
- ↑ Steinberg, Mollie B. The history of the Fourteenth street theatre (1931)
- ↑ (30 May 1942). Producer of Play Found Dead in Hotel, The New York Times
- ↑ Cooper, Lee E. (1 April 1938). Old Fourteenth St. Theatre to Pass Into Hands of Wreckers on Monday, The New York Times
- ↑ (3 September 2011). The Lost 1866 Theatre Francais -- 107 West 14th Street, Daytonian In Manhattan