Category Archives: Architecture

Vanished New York City Art Deco: The Broadmoor Pharmacy & Restaurant

Today when one hears the word pharmacy the image that comes to mind is a place to buy medicine and “as seen on TV” products in a store that resembles a small supermarket. Before World War Two some pharmacies were quite different and quite elegant. The Broadmoor was such a place. There is nothing Art Deco about the 45 story skyscraper neo-gothic skyscraper at 295 Madison Avenue. Completed in 1930 it ended up being one of the last projects of Abraham E. Lefcourt (1876 – 1932). Lefcourt built up a Manhattan real estate empire that unraveled with the Great Depression.

 

Abraham E. Lefcourt, photo circa 1925.

Abraham E. Lefcourt (1876 – 1932). Photo from Wikipedia.

The upper floors of the Lefcourt Colonial Building.

The upper floors of the Lefcourt Colonial Building (1930) at the southeast corner of Madison Avenue and 41st Street. Image from NewYorkitecture.com.

The announcement of the Broadmoor Drug company leasing space in the building hit the papers in mid-April, 1930:

 

Broadmoor Drug company leases ground floor and basement of the Lefcourt Colonial Building.

The Broadmoor Drug Company leases space in the Lefcourt Colonial Buildng. New York Herald-Tribune, April 12, 1930, Pg. 11. Article from proquest.com.

Shortly after the opening of the building, the Boardmoor Pharmacy and Restaurant occupied the ground floor shop front and the basement. Architect Ely Jacques Kahn (1884 – 1972) designed the new restaurant and drug store in a restrained modern style.

 

Ely Jacques Kahn, circa 1935.

Ely Jacques Kahn, circa 1935. Photograph from Columbia University Libraries.

At street level was the pharmacy counter and soda fountain. The most dominating decorative feature of the ground floor was the wall treatment. Kahn employed alternating panels of Oriental walnut creating a subdued checker board pattern. Modern style vent grills were built into the walls above the large lighted display cases. Separating the dark walls from the light plaster ceiling was a narrow wood cornice. Another cornice in plaster with graduating bands lead to the ceiling. Bands also lined the outer edges of the ceiling

 

Broadmoor Pharmacy, ground floor drug store counter and soda fountain, 1930.

Ground floor pharmacy and sofa fountain. Samuel H. Gottscho photograph, October 25, 1930. From the collection of the Museum of the City of New York.

Providing light for the ground floor, etched, frosted glass fixtures hung from the ceiling. Glass cylinders framed the rectangular center section, while stepped metal fittings capped the top and bottom of the cylinders. A glass ball finial capped the top fitting. A two-tone terrazzo floor of a light color background with darker color squares led to a marble staircase to the basement.

 

Marble staircase leading down to the grill room and the tearoom.

The marble staircase leading down to the basement tearoom and grill rooms. Photograph by Samuel H. Gottscho taken on October 25, 1930, from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York.

Terrazzo flooring covered the entire basement space of the Broadmoor. The lower lobby floor consisted of a classic pattern of two-tone squares laid out diagonally surrounded by a dark boarder. Kahn matched the ceiling treatment of this space to that of the ground floor, with the same design of graduating bands. Lighting the room was another frosted glass light fixture mounted flush to the ceiling.

Directly opposite the staircase a niche provided patrons a place to sit on two large modern style sofas while waiting for friends or a table.

 

Basement lobby niche, 1930.

Basement lobby niche. Photo by Samuel H. Gottscho taken on October 25, 1930. From the collection of the Museum of the City of New York.

 

More two-tone terrazzo flooring was used in the this niche. A marble baseboard framed the bottom of the smooth light colored walls. Molded walnut trim divided the top of the walls from the light colored ceiling. Rounded corners at the back of the room employed a darker color that graduated onto narrow bands in increasing lighter color to the back wall. A large rectangular mirror placed in the center of the rear hung over a modernistic table with metal legs and a highly lacquered top. Cylindrical, frosted glass wall sconces lined the walls as well as flush ceiling light.

Lower lobby columns received the same decorative treatment as the walls on the ground floor. Using the alternating grain of the Oriental walnut panels to give them visual interest.

On opposite sides of the lobby were two different dining rooms. The Grill Room received a masculine decorative scheme. Again Kahn chose walnut paneling for the wall treatment. But instead of alternating grain 15 inch squares, long panels were placed with the grain running vertically with narrow, darker color wood strips as separators. The columns in the Grill Room matched the wall paneling.

 

A Photograph of the Broadmoor Grill Room.

The Broadmoor Grill Room, October 25, 1930. Photograph by Samuel H. Gottscho. From the collection of the Museum of the City of New York.

Light color plaster in narrow bands separated the wood paneling and molding from the darker painted ceiling. Capping the four sides of the Grill Room columns were semi-circular frosted glass and metal sconces, decreasing in diameter as they descended.

 

The Broadmoor's Grill Room ceiling light.

Broadmoor’s Grill Room ceiling light detail. Samuel H. Gottscho photograph from the Museum of the City of New York collection.

Flush mounted etched frosted glass squares, surrounded by a painted, modernistic border in an octagon that in turn was surrounded by Mayan inspired animals decorated the ceiling. The Grill Room, large, open and comfortable was a perfect place for a mid-town business man to lunch or to grab a quick bite before heading home.

 

Across the lobby the equally large and open tearoom was a lovely spot for the ladies to have refreshments after making the rounds of the Fifth Avenue shops.

 

The Broadmoor Tearoom, 1930.

Samuel Gottscho photograph of the Broadmoor Tearoom, October 25, 1930. From the collection of the Museum of the City of New York.

The main decorative feature of the Tearoom was a very stylized, modernistic mural of a country scene wrapping around the entire room. Using metallic paint to separate the different elements of the mural (trees, hills, sky and clouds) gave it extra style. Kahn’s use of mirrors on the columns and on the walls between the panels of the mural made the room appear even larger.

 

Tearoom detail.

Tearoom, detail. Samuel H. Gottscho photograph from the Museum of the City of New York collection.

 

Hanging modernistic light fixtures provided direct light through the glass base and indirect lighting from the perforated metal shade. The tables featured highly polished, vermillion, lacquered tops.  After a meal one paid the cashier at a walnut veneered counter and exited under a large clock, built into the wall.

 

The Broadmoor, like so many other business enterprises of the early 1930s suffered financial difficulties just about a year and a half after opening. In March of 1932 the following article appeared in The New York Herald-Tribune:

 

March 28, 1932 NY Herald-Tribune article announcing the Roger Smith Interests taking over the Broadmoor Restaurant.

The Roger Smith interests take over the lease of the Broadmoor Restaurant. New York Herald-Tribune, March 28, 1932, Pg. 30. Article from proquest.com.

 

For the next few years, the Roger Smith Organization kept the name, Broadmoor.  Whether or not they redecorated it remains unknown. Sometime around 1935 or 1936 they dropped the Broadmoor name and for the rest of the decade it was known as The Roger Smith Restaurant. The Roger Smith Restaurant did well for most of the 1930s under the new management. Many different groups held private dinners there. The local New York newspapers occasionally announced that this company or that organization held their annual dinner at the Roger Smith Restaurant at 40 East 41st Street. Then by 1939 these announcements stopped and it must be assumed that the Roger Smith Organization closed this location. Today no evidence remains of the once elegant 1930 pharmacy-restaurant at the corner of Madison Avenue and 41st Street.

 

Exit from the tearoom of the Broadmoor restaurant. 1930 photo.

The exit from the Tearoom of the Broadmoor Pharmacy and Restaurant. On the right is the walnut veneered cashier counter and above the exit is the built in clock. Samuel H. Gottscho photograph from the Museum of the City of New York Collection.

 

Anthony & Chris (The Freakin’, ‘tiquen Guys)

 

Sources:

The New York Daily News

The New York Herald-Tribune

The Museum of the City of New York

New York 1930 Architecture and Urbanism Between the Two World Wars

Vanished New York City Art Deco: The French Casino

 

CLICK HERE FOR PART ONE

CLICK HERE FOR PART TWO

Marquee of the French Casino.

Photograph of the entrance to the French Casino, 1937. Image from ebay.com

1934

By the end of 1934 the former Earl Carroll Theatre found the formula for success, with its conversion into the French Casino. But for most of the second half of the year, it sat empty. In July it looked as though a new enterprise would come to the rescue. The enormous theatre would undergo a conversion into a mixed entertainment venue.

 

Radio at the Casino Theatre.

Theatrical Notes, The New York Times, July 9, 1934, Pg. 18. Article from proquest.com.

For reasons now lost to us today, the plan for converting the theatre into the largest radio studio in the world never materialized. Instead a new entertainment trend was beginning. By the time the United States hit the rock bottom depths of the depression in the summer of 1932, many Manhattan theatres sat unused. The election of Franklin Roosevelt created hope and the economy started a very slow recovery. Repeal of prohibition in December of 1933 brought the speakeasy era to and end. Probably the most famous NYC speakeasies turned cafe society nightclubs were, 21 Club, The Stork Club and El Morocco. These typified Manhattan nightclubs, small spaces crammed into basements or brownstones.

 

 

With the combination of repeal and a seemingly recovering economy, the nightclub industry in New York City started to boom. New and larger venues were needed and empty theatres were perfect for conversion into large nightclubs. And with full stage facilities, providing elaborate shows was easy. In 1933 Continental Music Halls, Inc. took over the Hammerstein Theatre on Broadway and, directly adjacent to it on 54th Street, the Gallo Opera House. The Hammerstein became the Music Hall and the Gallo the Casino de Paris. Showman Billy Rose (1899-1966) oversaw the operations of both nightclubs and produced their shows.

 

 

 

Clifford C. Fischer

French Casino producer, Clifford C. Fischer.

 

Producer Clifford C. Fischer (1882-1951) who staged the Folies Bergeres show at the Century Progress World’s Fair in Chicago was looking for a venue in Manhattan for his revue. The empty Casino / Earl Carroll Theatre proved to be the spot being three times the size of either the Gallo Opera House or the Hammerstein Theatre. The enormous stage facilities were perfect for his elaborate Folies Bergeres show. The New York Times ran this announcement –

 

Clifford C. Fischer article, New York Times, November 7, 1934, Pg. 33.

The New York Times, November 7, 1934, Pg. 33. Article from proquest.com

 

Christmas, 1934

 

Opening night Ad for the French Casino.

Advertisement for the Folies Bergeres, the show that opened the French Casino. New York Herald-Tribune, December 24, 1934, Pg. 4. Image from Proquest.com.

On 10:00 P.M. of Christmas Day, the French Casino opened to the public. The remodeled interior consisted of some decorations applied to the black velvet walls. Tables  replaced the seats in the orchestra and balcony. By enlarging and extending the stage into the house it became a dance floor between shows.  New staircases extending down from the former box seats allowed guests in the balcony direct access to the dance floor. The enormous lounge under the balcony became a cocktail lounge. A new room length bar completed the space. This new cocktail lounge alone was nearly the size of the average Manhattan nightclub.

French Casino, view toward the stage.

French Casino view from under the balcony looking toward the stage. Image from the Folie Parisienne program, collection of the author.

 

French Casino view from the stage.

French Casino, view from the stage / dance floor, showing new staircase and wall decorations. Image from the Folie Parisienne program, collection of the author.

 

French Casino cocktail lounge.

The former lounge underneath the balcony converted to a cocktail lounge of the French Casino. On the right is the newly installed bar. Image from the Folie Parisienne program, collection of the author.

The new nightclub and the Revue Folies Bergeres received excellent reviews. The French Casino immediately became the place to go for a night on the town.

 

New York Times review of the Revue Folies Bergeres, December 27, 1934.

Review of the Revue Folies Bergeres, New York Times, December 27, 1934, Pg. 25. Article from proquest.com.

 

Scenes from the Revue Folies Bergeres

 

 

1935 – 1937

As the economy continued its slow improvement during the mid-1930s, the French Casino remained a popular night spot. And celebrities were often seen in the audience. Which made the French Casino even more popular with the general public.

 

John Barrymore at the French Casino.

John Barrymore and friend at the French Casino. (Photo by NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images)

 

Mrs. John Jacob Astor, 3r. at the French Casino.

Mrs. John Jacob Astor 3rd is chatting with Robert Gardiner, and some of their friends at the French Casino here. Photo from Getty Images.

 

Jack Dempsey and Wife at the French Casino_Getty Images_Bettmann

Jack Dempsey, the Mansassa Mauler, and his wife, the former Hannah Williams, singer, are pictured in the French Casino. Soon Jack will open a restaurant of his own. Photo from Getty Images.

 

Over the next three years, the French Casino presented some of the most continental nightclub shows in Manhattan. Even the French Line’s S.S. Normandie was featured in the show. Folie Parisienne featured scenes at the boat train, on board and at customs on the pier.

 

Folie Parisienne program cover, French Casino.

Cover of the Folie Parisienne program. From the collection of the author.

 

 

The French Casino was such a success that the Clifford C. Fischer expanded the company by opening night clubs in other cities. Over the next couple of years French Casinos opened in Chicago, Miami and a London Casino in that city’s West End theatre district. Then  in 1937 two events took place that would effect the fortune of the French Casino. First in August, the slowly recovering economy stalled and the United States slid back into a severe recession. Then less than a month later a new, large night club theatre opened in the heart of Times Square. The International Casino, after many delays, opened on September 17, 1937. It was huge, streamline moderne in design and it offered shows just as lavish and continental as the French Casino.

 

The International Casino.

The International Casino, 1938. Located on the east side of Times Square between 44th and 45th Street.(Photo by Keystone/FPG/Getty Images)

 

The Interior of the International Casino.

New Year’s Eve 1939-1940 inside the International Casino. Photo from Getty Images.

 

The combination of the new night spot, a shrinking economy and over expansion from opening night clubs in other cities dealt a death blow to the French Casino. Without any notice the French Casino closed on November 20, 1937.

 

The closing of the French Casino.

The New York Herald-Tribune article about the abrupt closing of the French Casino. November 23, 1937, Pg. 17. Article from proquest.com

 

After almost four years, the former Earl Carroll Theatre sat empty once again. But this was just a temporary situation. Soon into 1938 a new tenant decided to try his luck with the unlucky theatre.

 

1938

It’s time to welcome Producer Billy Rose back into the story. Rose who started the vogue of the theater/restaurant/nightclub back in 1933 with the Casino de Paris, moved into the former French Casino. In 1935 the success of the French Casino was the direct reason that those first two Billy Rose nightclub/theatres went out of business. Now Rose moved into the white elephant at 7th Avenue and 50th Street. The French Casino became the Casa Manana. For the Texas Centennial in 1936 Billy Rose was hired by Amon G. Carter to produce shows in a 4000 seat, amphitheatre / restaurant, the Casa Manana. It was very successful and popular remaining in operation even after the Centennial had passed. Now Rose decided to bring the Casa Manana to New York City. Just two months after the French Casino’s closing, on January 18, 1938 the Casa Manana opened its doors.

 

Advertisement for the opening night of Billy Rose's Casa Manana.

Advertisement for the opening night of the Casa Manana. New York Daily News, January 13, 1938. Clipping from newspapers.com.

 

The opening night show, Let’s Play Fair spoofed the up coming 1939 World’s Fair. Like the French Casino, the Casa Manana was off to a successful start. It was not unusual to spot celebrities in the audience.

 

Edward G. Robinson and wife with Claire Trevor at the opening of the Casa Manana.

Claire Trevor joins Edward G. Robinson and wife for the opening of the Casa Manana. Image from Getty Images.

 

Daily News review of the Casa Manana's opening night.

Review of the opening of the Casa Manana. New York Daily News, January 19, 1938, Pg.47. Clipping from newspapers.com.

 

Billy Rose and Eleanor Holm in the lounge.

Billy Rose and Aquacade swimming star and the future Mrs. Rose, Eleanor Holm relaxing in the Casa Manana lounge. Image from Getty Images.

 

Outside of some fresh paint the interior remained basically unchanged.

 

Casa Manana stage and dance floor.

The Casa Manana stage and dance floor. The proscenium arch was little changed from the days when it was the Earl Carroll Theatre. Image from the Bill Morrison Collection – Shubert Archive.

 

Casa Manana auditorium.

Casa Manana auditorium. Daily News Collection – Getty Images.

 

1939

The new year began well for the Casa Manana, with shows generally receiving good reviews and audiences still filling the large nightclub. But with the upcoming World’s Fair and Billy Rose getting his Aquacade ready, the quality of the shows in the spring started to lessen. So the inevitable of course happened. In mid-June Billy Rose closed the Casa Manana. After just a year and a half the large theatre sat vacant once again.

 

The Casa Manana closing notice, June, 1939.

The closing notice for the Casa Manana. New York Daily News, June 13, 1939, Pg. 41. Clipping from newspapers.com.

 

1939 – 1940

For the rest of 1939 many items appeared in the newspapers about what would happen next to the former Earl Carroll Theatre. George White showed interest in leasing the space to stage another revue of his, but it did not happen. Then, pretty much to everyone’s surprise just before New Year’s 1939/1940 The French Casino moved back into its old home. Song writer / producer Lew Brown reopened the place with a variety show. But this show was nothing like the continental revues that Clifford C. Fischer produced during the French Casino’s heyday.

 

The reopening of the French Casino.

The French Casino reopens. The New York Daily News, December 27, 1939, Pg. 43. Clipping from newspapers.com

 

And pretty much to no one’s surprise, it was not long into 1940 that this new version of the French Casino, closed. The owners, Haring and Blumenthal, must have been fed up with show business. By the summer, looking around for a new tenant, they made it known that they would not refuse a commercial business a lease. And that is just what happened.

 

New article announcing a five and dime to move into the former Casa Manana site.

The New York Daily News, May 23, 1940, Pg. 48. Clipping for newspapers.com.

 

In preparation for the conversion of the former Earl Carroll Theatre / Casino Theatre / French Casino / Casa Manana into a retail space, the six story building fronting 7th Avenue was demolished in the summer. It would be replaced by a two story “taxpayer”. A “taxpayer” is a small two, or three story building constructed to cover the property taxes.

 

 

 

On August 28, 1940 Variety ran an article announcing the new tenant for the former Theatre/nightclub.

 

The former Earl Carroll Theatre becomes a Woolworth's.

Variety, August 28, 1940, Pg. 45. Clipping for proquest.com.

 

Finally Haring and Bluementhal found a successful tenant. Woolworth’s moved in by the end of 1940 and stayed for the next 50 years.

Woolworths and the taxpayer.

Looking south east along 7th Avenue at the 1940 two floor taxpayer built on the former six story office building site, 1956. Photo from CInema Treasures.

The lobby was completely demolished. But the auditorium partially survived. The orchestra floor and balcony were completely torn out. New walls and a drop ceiling were installed and the stage was blocked off. But above the drop ceiling some of the original 1931 theatre remained. Some black velvet still survived on the walls, the original proscenium light fixtures and the top of the proscenium arch were there. And beyond that, most of the backstage facilities remained intact and unused. The dressing rooms sat empty and abandoned. Some of the black and buff modernistic brick work was still visible on 50th Street.

 

Earl Carroll Theatre color photograph.

Color photograph showing proscenium, ceiling and sidewall detail (1988). Image from the book Lost Broadway Theatres.

 

1980 photo of Woolworths.

Looking east on 50th Street towards the former Earl Carroll Theatre / French Casino. 1980 NYC tax photo.

But nothing in Manhattan is forever. Even Woolworth’s passed from the scene. Finally in 1990, the Woolworth’s at 7th Avenue and 50th Street was demolished and with it what was left the second Earl Carroll Theatre.

 

The Second Earl Carroll Theatre, 1931

The second Earl Carroll Theatre at 7th Avenue & 50th Street. View looking Southeast. Image from Getty Images / New York Historical Society.

 

Anthony & Chris (The Freakin’, ‘Tiquen Guys)

Sources: Lost Broadway Theatres, New York Times, New York Herald-Tribune, New York Daily News, Variety.