Tag Archives: Broadway

Born to Dance – Streamline Moderne meets Hollywood Regency

Window card for the 1936 M-G-M film Born to Dance.

Born to Dance (Roy Del Ruth, US 1936). Window Card. Image from Heritage Auctions.

Born to Dance, M-G-M’s big musical for the 1936 holiday season, offered  audiences laughs, excellent Cole Porter songs and great dancing from Eleanor Powell. It also gave audiences a glimpse of things to come in interior design. Cedric Gibbons (1893-1960), head of the studio’s art department, never shied away from cutting edge, modern sets. Gibbons designs helped to introduced this new style to the American public in the late 1920s.

 

Circa 1935 black and white photo of Cedric Gibbons, head of the M-G-M art department.

Cedric Gibbons head of the art department at M-G-M, circa 1935. Image from lamorguefiles.blogspot.com.

 

By the mid-1930s modern interior design had undergone a seismic change. The era of the crazy angles and geometrics of the late 1920s was over. The Depression brought in streamlining, with its chrome accents and speed lines offering a machine age aesthetic. Concurrent with streamlining another style started coming into vogue, Hollywood Regency. Also known as Hollywood Modern, interior designers Dorothy Draper and William Haines were arguably its best practitioners.

 

Combining a wide range of colors, from vibrant to pastels, metal and glass accents, white plaster frames and mirror covered furniture and walls are hallmarks of this style that exemplifies luxury. Hollywood Regency, a termed coined by Draper, emerged in the late 1920s and reached its peak of popularity in the 1940s. It began to diminish as a trend in the mid-1950s but has not entirely vanished from the interior design field.

 

B&W image, main title card of Born to Dance, 1936 M-G-M film, directed by Roy Del Ruth and starring Eleanor Powell.

Main title card for Born to Dance (Roy Del Ruth, US 1936). Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

 

Born to Dance, in production between July to November 1936, highlights the changes happening to interior design in the mid-1930s. The working class world of the “Lonely Hearts Club” hotel and restaurant is clean, sleek and streamlined. While the world inhabited by the Broadway star Lucy James, is pure 1936 luxury.

 

The Plot

Born to Dance uses the typical “boy meets girl, boy loses girl, boy gets girl” trope.

 

B&W frame grab from the DVD of Nora, played by Eleanor Powell, looking up the front steps of the Lonely Hearts Club.

Nora (Eleanor Powell) arrives at the Lonely Hearts Club. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

In this particular case sailor, Ted Barker (Jimmy Stewart), meets an aspiring dancer, Nora (Eleanor Powell), at the Lonely Hearts Club while on leave.

 

The sailor meets Nora at the Lonely Hearts Club's soda fountain.

Boy meets girl. The Sailor (Jimmy Stewart) meets Nora at the soda fountain of the Lonely Hearts Club. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

Complications arise when Broadway star Lucy James, to get some publicity, visits the fleet. Virginia Bruce plays the star to “bitchy” perfection. During the visit, James’ beloved pekingese, Cheeky, falls over board. All the sailors jump into the river to rescue the dog but it is Barker who gets to Cheeky first.

 

A fake romance is contrived by the star’s producer, unfortunately she actually falls for Barker.

 

Born to Dance, frame grab, newspaper story showing a picture of Lucy James out with her sailor.

A newspaper article about Lucy James’ latest romance. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

Meanwhile, the aspiring dancer becomes the star’s understudy (just like in real life when a brand new to Broadway unknown lands her first show). By this time the infatuated star has forbidden her producer from planting any more stories in the press about her romance, with the threat to quit the show if he does. As Lucy James grows more temperamental and storms off the set, the producer asks Nora to do one of her dances, which she does to perfection. The star seeing that she has been outdone by her understudy fires Nora on the spot.

 

When Ted learns of this, he calls the newspapers imitating the producer and plants a fake story that Lucy James will be marrying her sailor boyfriend. Of course the ploy works and the star quits the show on opening night.

 

Planting the fake news stories.

Ted calling the newspapers to plant the fake story of Lucy James’ impending wedding while Jenny Saks (Una Merkle) looks on. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

Lucy James falls for the fake story.

Lucy James falls for the ploy. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

Nora goes on in her place and is a huge hit.

 

Making her Broadway debut.

Nora making her entrance in her first Broadway show. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

And it’s a happy ending for all . . .

 

The finale of the show within the movie, Born to Dance.

The finale of the show within the movie. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

. . .well except for Lucy James.

 

So long Lucy James.

Bye, bye Lucy James. It never ends well for the second female lead in a musical comedy. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

 

The Art Direction

Production staff title card, from the opening credits of the film.

Title card for the behind the scenes production staff, including the art directors. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

By the mid-1930s with M-G-M releasing forty movies a year, it proved to be impossible for Cedric Gibbons to solely design each film. For Born to Dance, Joseph Wright and Edwin B. Willis worked in collaboration on the art direction with Gibbons.

The Lonely Hearts Club

The Lonely Hearts Club is all sleek, streamlined and fun. The main lobby and soda fountain gleam with light color and chrome accents. And because movies musicals are fantasies, the interior is much larger than the outside of the building.

 

The main lobby of the Lonely Hearts Club.

Nora makes her way through the main lobby of the Lonely Hearts Club. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

Dominating the lobby are circular settees.  Between them are side tables with a chrome tube chair. On one of the tables is a moderne, opaque glass lamp of geometric shapes topped by a fluted, drum shade. On one entire side of the lobby a double staircase leads to the second floor living quarters. Thin metal posts hold up the railing and decorative metal strips hang, curve and form hearts between them. This makes the set light and airy instead of heavy and overpowering. A border of chrome trim on the staircase walls aids in the streamline feel of the room.

 

The Lonely Hearts Club main lobby in the film Born to Dance. Chrome trim border aids in the streamline feeling.

The main lobby showing the chrome trim border on the staircase wall. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

 

No hard liquor at the Lonely Hearts Club, just wholesome milkshakes and ice cream sundaes. Nestled under the staircase and balcony is a soda fountain. And the streamlining continues here with lots of chrome accents. Chrome speed lines decorate the banquettes and the front of the soda fountain. The underside of the balcony is fluted and decorated with the same heart motif as the railings. The thin columns supporting it are topped by a capital of three chrome rings. Of course the furniture features chrome as well with its tube frames. The Bakelite floor also helps to make the place gleam.

 

The seating area for the soda fountain underneath the balcony.

The seating area of the soda fountain underneath the balcony. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

 

The front of the soda fountain.

Mush Tracy (Buddy Ebsen) doing his dance solo in front of the entire cast sitting at the soda fountain. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

On the other side of the lobby is the large registration desk. And like everything else at the Lonely Hearts Club, it is light in color, clean and curved. Blonde wood starting to come into vogue in the mid-1930s is used for the desk.

 

The registration desk. Frame grab from the Born to Dance DVD.

The Lonely Hearts Club registration desk. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

The curve of the desk not only welcomes new visitors to the club with a symbolic embrace, it also mimics the curve of the letterbox wall directly behind it.

 

View of the registration desk from the other side.

Reverse angle shot of the registration desk. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

The reverse angle shot of the desk shows a terrific machine age table lamp in the style of Kurt Versen.

Located directly behind the registration desk is the apartment of Jenny Saks (played by the wonderful Una Merkel). The overall design of this set is moderne, but softened with traditional decorations.

 

The apartment of Jenny Saks at the Lonely Hearts club in the film Born to Dance.

Jenny Saks’ rooms at the Lonely Hearts Club. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

No cold chrome tube furniture in here. A moderne table and lamp sits directly next to a wingback chair covered in a floral barkcloth that matches the curtains. A wingback chair of leather is opposite next to a floor lamp / table and shelf unit that is a hybrid of modern and traditional design. A very streamline modern sconce juts out from the wall. A large built in banquette forms the dinning area of Jenny’s apartment.  It is simple, clean design and light in color. A large semicircular window with sheer curtains also helps to make it seem less overpowering.  In this set the M-G-M art department created the idealized apartment for the mid-1930s single women.

 

The dinning banquet in Jenny's apartment. From the 1936 film Born to Dance.

Jenny, her daughter Sally (Juanita Quigley) and Nora at breakfast in the large banquette. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

 

Lucy James’ Apartment

Contrasting the look of the Lonely Hearts Club is the apartment set of Lucy James. Here is where the shift in design begins, away from Streamline Moderne to Hollywood Regency. It is still a modern style, but an adaptation of classicism and traditional designs. One standout feature of the set is the use of lots of white plaster for frames, furniture and lamps. This is a hallmark of Hollywood Regency interior decoration. Dark colors contrast lighter colors and one wall features a huge mirror surrounding the fireplace. The effect of the design is elegant, luxurious and sensuous.

 

The living room set of Lucy James' apartment, from Born to Dance.

Lucy James (Virginia Bruce) with Cheeky and her producer (Allan Dinehart) in her living room. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

 

Even the apartment entry doors highlight the Hollywood Regency style. The outside of the door being black lacquer while the inside is a mirrored surface. Both sides of the door feature an metallic, octagonal, moderne insert.

 

Ted Barker entering Lucy James' Apartment.

The entry way to Lucy James’ apartment. Showing the black lacquer and mirror doors. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

 

Just inside the entrance a white plaster stature in a the classical mode hold a lamp aloft that is dripping in crystals. While a moderne curved half wall opposite acts as a base for a gleaming glass ball column. Showing how the classical offset the modern for this new look.

 

The one place in the apartment where moderne shines is the terrace.

 

The very moderne terrace of the Lucy James' apartment, in the film Born to Dance.

Here is the very moderne apartment terrace of Lucy James. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

 

A fountain built into a circular settee is the focal point of the terrace set. The checker board floor, imitating terrazzo, continues the dark and light color scheme from inside the apartment. And to supply the romantic music is an extremely modern Sparton Bluebird radio of blue mirror and chrome.

 

 

But the impression that lingers of the Lucy James apartment is a showcase for this new style. White painted furniture, tables with smoky glass tops, dripping crystal statue lamps and fur trimmed lampshades are harbingers of interior design trends that will flourish over the next ten years.

 

Club Continental

Born to Dance, being a backstage musical comedy, has the obligatory scene where the characters go out on the town to a fantastic Manhattan nightclub.

 

Rooftop sign of the Club Continental.

Club Continental rooftop sign advertising the dance team of Georges and Jalna. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

 

Like most Hollywood movie depictions of a New York City nightclub, the set for the Club Continental is around four times the size what they were in reality.

 

Georges and Jalna performing at the Club Continental. Lucy James and Ted Barker watch from the audience.

Lucy James and Ted Barker enjoying the dancing of George and Jalna at the Club Continental. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

This set is the fantasy of what most non-New Yorkers believed what a Manhattan nightclub looked like. It is chic, moderne, classy and enormous. There were a few huge nightclubs in New York by the mid-1930s, like Billy Rose’s Casino de Paree and the French Casino. But most were cramped spaces squeezed into existing buildings.

The entertainers that are featured at the Club Continental are the real life dance team of Georges and Jalna. And Born to Dance maybe their only film appearance. A large portion of their career was performing at the Waldorf-Astoria hotel dancing to the music of Xavier Cugat and his Orchestra.

 

Georges and Jalna performing at the fictitious Club Continental.

The real life dance team Georges and Jalna on the illuminated dance floor of the fictitious Club Continental. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

 

In Born to Dance, one can see the design change coming. The where we’ve been being replaced by the where we’re heading. Within a few years the moderne style that is now known as Art Deco, would come to its end. Hollywood Regency is only one of the style trends to replace it. Other more traditional and conservative styles once again came into vogue. And movie set design would be forecasting and reflecting these changes.  By the time of the release of The Women in 1939, the change is complete.

But with its good and funny script, tuneful songs by Cole Porter and a cast, obviously enjoying themselves, Born to Dance is an entertaining way to spend an hour and half. And its also a feast for your eyes with its top rate set design.

 

The closing title card for Born to Dance.

The closing credit title for Born to Dance. Image from the Warner Bros. DVD.

 

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

 

Vanished New York City Art Deco: The Second Earl Carroll Theatre

Stage door of the Earl Carroll Theatre, 1931.

Stage door of the second Earl Carroll Theatre, 1931. Image from Getty Images / New York Historical Society.

The second Earl Carroll Theatre (1931), located at the southeast corner of 7th Avenue and 50th Street, with 3,000 seats was the largest legitimate theatre in the world. The sign over the stage door read “Through these portals pass the most beautiful women in the world”. And inside that door stood the most modern theatre in the world. A showcase of modernistic design opening over a year before the Radio City Music Hall and the R.-K.-O. Roxy/Center Theatre. But unlike its neighboring movie palaces, the Earl Carroll Theatre’s passing remains unmourned. The unusual fact about it is, it remained hiding in somewhat plain sight for 50 years from closing as an entertainment venue until its demolition.

 

Earl Carroll

 

Earl Carroll, circa 1925.

Earl Carroll publicity portrait, circa 1925. Image from worthpoint.com   

Earl Carroll (1893 – 1948) was one of Broadway’s major impresarios in the 1920’s. Carroll, born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania served as a fighter pilot during the First World War. His war service sparked a lifelong interest in aviation. After the war, Carroll found his way to New York and soon made it to the top of the theatrical world as a composer, songwriter, director, and producer. As a self-proclaimed expert on feminine beauty, Carroll became famous for his revues, The Vanities.

 

Opening night ad for The Vanities.

Opening night advertisement for the first Earl Carroll Vanities, 1923. From the New York Herald-Tribune, July 2, 1923. Image from proquest.com

The Broadway revue, a product of the past, is a type of show that today people have difficulty connecting with. But in the 1920’s audiences eagerly awaited each annual installment. Growing out of vaudeville, Florenz Ziegfeld, Jr. (1867 – 1932) introduced the high-class revue to Broadway with his first Follies in 1907. This set the form and style of all future revues. Joining the Follies in 1911 as a performer was George White (1891 – 1968). By the end of the 1910s, White switched from performing to producing. And beginning in 1919 began his own annual revue, The Scandals. Both Ziegfeld and White would play roles in the fate of the second Earl Carroll Theatre. 

 

 

Earl Carroll presented his first edition of The Vanities in the late summer of 1923. Where Ziegfeld had class and White had fast paced shows and lots of dancing, Carroll had flesh. The Vanities were known for having the most scantily clad showgirls of any production outside of Paris. Also in an attempt to outdo his revue rivals, Carroll had a theatre of his own built and named after himself.

 

The First Earl Carroll Theatre

 

The First Earl Carroll Theatre

The first Earl Carroll Theatre, circa 1922. Image from the Bill Morrison Collection – Shubert Archive.

 

Variety broke the news of the new theatre on April 29, 1921:

Youngest Owner

New Theatre Starts June 1 – Will Seat 1,200

    Ground will be broken June 1 on the site of the new Earl Carroll theatre. It will be the first theatre in the Seventh avenue section of the theatre zone above 49th street. 

    The Carroll will be located on the southeast corner of 50th street and Seventh avenue. It will have a seating capacity of 1,200, 700 for the lower floor. The stage will have a depth of 34 feet and the plot measures 140 by 100 feet. In addition to the theatre there will be a four-story office building. The total cost of building is $700,000. The site itself is leased. 

    An innovation on the stage will feature it. The back wall will be a plaster dome. This will be tinted in light blue and take the place of cycloramas, being amenable to other color treatment. 

    Carroll will be the youngest theatre owner on Broadway. He is not yet 30 years of age. A wealthy business man is backing the theatre. 

Variety, April 29, 1921, Pg. 14.

 

The Angel

The unnamed wealthy business man in the Variety article was Forth Worth, Texas banker William R. Edrington (1872 – 1932).

 

William R. Edrington

William R. Edrington. Image from The Banker’s Magazine, Volume 107, pg. 151.

Edrington, vice president of the Farmers & Mechanics bank of Fort Worth, put up the $750,000 for the theatre and an additional $1,500,000 for the adjacent office building. Within a year of the opening of the Earl Carroll Theatre, Edrington became a New York City resident. In 1923 he was elected vice president of the Hamilton National Bank.

 

1922 – 1929

The Opening of the Theatre

Believe it or not, Carroll met Edrington through a plea that Carroll posted in the newspaper. Upon the opening of the Earl Carroll Theatre in 1922, Variety reported the story:

 

March 3, 1922 Variety Headline.

Variety March 3, 1922, Pg. 14. Image from Media History Digital Library.

    When Carroll advertised for financial aid last season in a last desperate endeavor to keep “The Lady of the Lamp afloat at the Republic, Wm R. Edrington was among those who answered Carroll’s call. The ads, while bringing the financial assistance sought, failed to keep “The Lady of the Lamp” from flickering out. But Mr. Edrington was now interested in the show business and Carroll outlined a plan for a new theatre. Then came the unusual. Mr. Edrington not only listened, but agreed to finance the project. 

    The Earl Carroll is built of tapestry brick with an entrance on Seventh Avenue. The house is beautiful even in these days of handsome playhouses. There is one balcony, with a total seating capacity of 1,000, 633 in the orchestra and 378 on the upper floor. 

Earl Carroll Theatre outer lobby and ticket booth.

Earl Carroll Theatre outer lobby and ticket booth just inside the Seventh Avenue entrance. Image from the Bill Morrison Collection at the Shubert Archive.

 

Earl Carroll Theatre auditorium.

Auditorium of the 1922 Earl Carroll Theatre. Image from the Bill Morrison Collection at the Shubert Archive.

    Among the innovations are an extension over the proscenium, sort of canopy which carries a complete lighting system,  and an orchestra lift, which can be manipulated after the manner of an elevator, to raise the orchestra musicians into view or conceal them, if that is desired. 

    There are no boxes. Instead of where boxes would ordinarily be, alcoves are located on either side of the stage. These were utilized by the cast for the purpose of taking curtain calls. The ceiling contains a lighted dome, on the order of the style of construction of the modern picture house.

    The interior decorations run to blue and yellow, with a flowered carpeting that is tasteful without being ostentatious. All of the decorations, in fact, are marked by a quiet, restful style of coloring. 

Variety, March 3, 1922, Pgs. 14 & 35.

The Architect

George Keister.

George Keister, circa 1900. Image from Wikipedia.

Earl Carroll chose the noted architect George Keister, to plan his theatre. By the early 1920’s Keister had become famous for the many theatres he designed in New York. Some previous commissions include, The Astor Theatre (1906), The Belasco Theatre (1907), The George M. Cohan Theatre (1911) and The Apollo Theatre (1914) in Harlem.

 

Although Carroll did not know it in the winter of 1922 when his theatre opened, it would only stand for eight years. And he had assembled his team to finance and design a new and significantly larger Earl Carroll Theatre.

 

Competition from the Movies

With the arrival of talking pictures in the late-1920s, the movies posed a real threat to the legitimate theatre for the first time. Movie palaces were getting bigger and bigger and in 1927 the largest movie theatre in the world opened directly across the street from the Earl Carroll Theatre. The Roxy Theatre (on the north east corner of 50th street & Seventh avenue) with its nearly 6,000 seats offered customers a movie and an elaborate stage show with prices ranging from $0.50 to a $1.65.

 

So in the summer of 1929 Earl Carroll began thinking about ways to beat the movies at their own game, or at least at somewhat comparable prices.

 

The Second Earl Carroll Theatre

1929

The New York Daily News ran the following item on August 1, 1929. The plans of a new Earl Carroll Theatre were first leaked here.

 

Daily News August 1, 1929

Article from the New York Daily News on August 1, 1929, Pg. 31. From newspapers.com

 

A few days later on August 4th, the Daily News ran a follow up item on the new Earl Carroll Theatre:

NEW PLAYHOUSE FOR E. CARROLL BEING PLANNED

    That new theatre of Earl Carroll’s appears to be in the offing again – only it won’t be exactly new. Carroll has bought a building on 49th st., near his present theatre, and it is understood to own three small buildings fronting on 50th st. Plans are now being drawn for an enlargement of the present 1,000 seat house to 3,000 seat capacity, using the added real estate. The Earl Carroll theatre will be turned over to R.-K.-O. movies in the fall, the first film, ironically enough, being Florenz Ziegfeld’s “Rio Rita.”

New York Daily News, August 4, 1929, Pg. 50.

While the article above hints that the new theatre will be an enlargement of the first Earl Carroll Theatre, that was not true. The only way to make room for the new, larger Earl Carroll Theatre would be to demolish the 1922 one completely.

On September 30, 1929, “Earl Carroll’s Sketchbook” moved to the 44th Street Theatre, conversion to the movies began, with R.-K.-O.’s Rio Rita opening on October 6, 1929.

 

1930

Financial negotiations between Earl Carroll and associates regarding the demolition of his theatre concluded on June 17, 1930. According to The New York Times on the following day:

 

June 18, 1930, New York Times Headline

Headline announcing Earl Carroll’s new theatre. New York Times, June 18, 1930, Pg. 36. From proquest.com

    The deal involved a $4,000,000 lease and the placing of a loan of $1,450,000 with the Mutual Life Insurance Company, as well as the transfer of title to three adjoining properties destined to be part of the site of the new building.

     The Earl Carroll Realty Corporation and W. R. Edrington, transferred the present theatre to the 755 Seventh Avenue Corporation the property at 154-158 West Fiftieth Street. The corporation, which owns the theatre site, then obtained the $1,450,000 loan on the entire plot, and made a new lease with the Carroll interests running to Aug. 31, 1952, the aggregate rental being about $4,000,000 plus taxes and other charges.

The New York Times, June 18, 1930, Pg. 36.

Carroll’s negotiation, transferring his property to the 755 Seventh Avenue Corporation would directly result in his loss of the theatre less than sixth months after it opened.

 

But in the summer of 1930 it was full speed ahead on demolition of the first Earl Carroll Theatre. With the July 13th closing of Unguarded Girls, which was nothing more than a burlesque show,  with a men only admission policy, the theatre shut down. Interior demolition began the next morning.

 

Unguarded Girls Ad

Closing day advertisement for Unguarded Girls, the last attraction at the first Earl Carroll Theatre. New York Daily News, July 13, 1930, Pg. 55. Image from newspapers.com

Even before the theatre closed, architect George Keister, working in conjunction with Thomas Lamb, had finished the plans for the new theatre. The originally announced seating capacity of 2,800 increased to 3,000 by the time the theatre opened. The enormous size would allow Carroll to stage musical shows with a top price of $3.00. The exterior, interior design and decoration fell to Joseph J. Babolnay, of Budapest, Hungary. In his native land, Babolnay designed the parliament building and several theatres in Europe. Babolnay’s work for the Earl Carroll recalled no past period, he said the theatre is in the “strictly modern” style, in the “straight and setback” lines of the new skyscrapers.

 

Side Elevation plan of the Earl Carroll Theatre

George Keister’s side elevation plan of the new Earl Carroll Theatre. Image from The Architectural Forum, November, 1931, usmodernist.org.

Floor plans for the Earl Carroll Theatre

Floor plans showing all the levels of the new Earl Carroll Theatre. Image from The Architectural Forum, November, 1931, usmodernist.org.

With the demolition of the old theatre finished by August, the laying of the new foundation began. As with most building projects during that time period, construction proceeded rapidly. In just 54 weeks from the start of construction the New Earl Carroll Theatre opened to its first audience.

 

1931

With construction finishing in the summer, Earl Carroll decided to open his new popular price theatre with the ninth edition of The Vanities.

 

Newspaper ad for The Vanities.

Advertisement for the ninth edition of The Vanities. New York Daily News, Pg. 340, August 12, 1930. Image from newspapers.com.

Just before the public opening of the theatre on August 27th, Carroll granted the press access. The reaction to the modernistic design of the enormous theatre was enthusiastic by both the press and the public. New York City had never seen modernism on this scale in a theatre before. On Monday, August 24th, the Lambs (the actors organization), dedicated the new theatre in a ceremony held in the lobby. They had also dedicated the first Earl Carroll Theatre, nine years earlier.

 

Exterior

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.

Geometric lines dominated the exterior design of the theatre. Relieving the wall design of the black and ivory buff colored bricks, came from the galvanized iron used for the marquees and fire escape. Executing the metal work in an exuberant modern style, prepared audiences for their experience on the inside.

 

50th street exterior of the Earl Carroll Theatre.

50th street exterior of buff and black bricks of the Earl Carroll Theatre, showing the modernistic fire escape, marquee and vertical sign. (Photo by Irving Browning/The New York Historical Society/Getty Images)

 

50th street detail of the Earl Carroll Theatre, 1931.

Detail of marquee, stage door and fire escape on 50th street, just east of 7th avenue, 1931. Image from Getty Images / New York Historical Society.

The Interior

    Everything is dull black plush or glistening black stone composition. Straight line modern decorative designs are carried out in glass, stainless steel and glistening silver. 

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, July 26, 1931, Pg. 22

 

Lobby

Instead of the usual ticket booth behind a caged window, here one purchased tickets from formally attired gentlemen at a sleek, waist high counter.

    The walls and ceiling of the lobby, and the counter itself are of highly polished black vitrolite, streaked with brown. The floor is of terrazzo with a marble border, and all trim is of chrome-nickel steel.

The Architectural Forum, November, 1931, Pg. 563

Vitrolite ticket Counter.

Vitrolite ticket counter in the outer lobby of the Earl Carroll Theatre. Image from Lost New York,

The Architectural Forum described the lobby lighting, walls and ceiling as:

. . . illumination of the lobby is supplied from a concealed source. Against a white vitrolite dome the lights are thrown from a cove that encircles it.

     A polished black cement, known as “burkstone,” has been used for the walls, with its joints covered by strips of chrome-nickel steel. The ceiling is plaster, painted black and gray, with an aluminum-leafed decorative cornice. 

The Architectural Forum, November, 1931, Pg. 563 & 564.

 

Lobby detail of the onyx like walls and indirect lighting.

Earl Carroll Theatre, main lobby, 1931, showing both the onyx like wall and the indirect lighting cove on the ceiling. Image from Getty Images / New York Historical Society.

No photographs of the stars or scenes from the current show were anywhere to be seen in the lobby as in other theatres. Instead the lobby featured a novel display.

    A unique lobby display is being prepared by John F. Lins, the sculptor, with a dozen of the Earl Carroll beauties in the current “Vanities” as models. The girls posed for these creations during the rehearsal period. The sculptural creations have been done by Mr. Lins to harmonize perfectly with the architectural decorations of Joseph J. Babolnay, in coloring and design. 

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle, August 17, 1931, Pg. 17

 

Lobby display.

Two of the John F. Lins busts flank a full length portrait of Earl Carroll in the main lobby. Image from Getty Images / New York Historical Society.

 

Detail of where the outer lobby meets the lobby.

Detail where the ticket lobby meets the lobby and the wall covering changes from Vitrolite to polished, Burkestone cement. Image from Getty Images / New York Historical Society.

 

 

Southern section of the main lobby.

View looking south in the main lobby, showing the travertine floor, the indirect lighting scheme and furniture designed by Babolnay. Image from The Architectural Forum, November, 1931, usmodernist.org.

 

Lobby lighting fixture detail.

Detail of main lobby ceiling, light fixture. Image from The Architectural Forum, November, 1931, usmodernist.org.

 

Mezzanine Lounge

The mezzanine lounge.

The mezzanine lounge underneath the balcony.(Photo by Irving Browning/The New York Historical Society/Getty Images)

 

    Just below the balcony cross-over is located the mezzanine lounge, 100 ft. long, and 60 ft. wide, with a ceiling that follows the slope of the balcony, 9 ft. 6 in. high at one point, and 20 ft. at the rear. The rear wall is composed of  mirrors that reach from floor to ceiling, separated by plaster columns. The walls and ceiling are painted olive green, to supplement the deeper green tone of the carpet. On the stair landing of each of the two stairways at the sides is a decorative fountain with Belgian black marble base and a bronze figure above. Two murals by A. Lindenfrost (sic) complete the decorative scheme.

The Architectural Forum, November, 1931, Pg. 564.

 

Alexander Leydenfrost mural in the mezzanine lounge.

The mezzanine lounge featuring one of the murals by Alexander Leydenfrost and furniture by Joseph J. Babolnay. Image from Getty Images / New York Historical Society.

 

Staircase from mezzanine to balcony featuring decorative fountain on the landing.

Staircase leading up to the balcony from the mezzanine lounge. Decorative fountain of bronze statue on black marble base in cove on the landing.(Photo by Irving Browning/The New York Historical Society/Getty Images)

 

Balbony fountain detail.

Detail of Babolnay decorative fountain in staircase cove. Also showing detail of carpet in three tones of green. Image from Getty Images / New York Historical Society.

 

Separating the enormous mirrors in the lounge, three plaster pillars descended from the ceiling in reverse setbacks to the floor. Terra cotta enlivened the aluminum painted columns. Like the all the lighting in the theatre, indirect light fixtures illuminated the lounge. Unseen color lights illuminated the staircases leading to and from the lounge.

 

Earl Carroll Theatre Lounge, northern end.

Northside lounge staircase leading to the balcony. (Photo by Irving Browning/The New York Historical Society/Getty Images)

 

Check room counter, mezzanine lounge, Earl Carroll Theatre.

Modernistic counter for concessions and coat check room on the eastern side of the mezzanine lounge. (Photo by Irving Browning/The New York Historical Society/Getty Images)

 

Earl Carroll Theatre mezzanine lounge.

The mezzanine lounge designed by Joseph J. Babolnay. Image from Getty Image / New York Historical Society.

 

Auditorium

Earl Carroll Theatre auditorium.

Auditorium of the Earl Carroll Theatre, looking towards the stage from the balcony. Fire curtain with coral, white and black stripes. Image from The Architectural Forum, November, 1931, usmodernist.org.

 

Inside the cavernous space of the auditorium 3,000 seats awaited patrons. No standing room at the rear of the orchestra allowed for extra rows, bringing the number of main floor seats to 1,500. Up in the loge and balcony were 1,300 seats. Another 200 chairs were in the modernistic boxes sloping down towards the stage.

 

    There are many innovations in the auditorium proper, not the least interesting of which is the use of black velvet, relieved by vertical bands of aluminum, to cover the hard plaster walls. The metal bands frame lighting coves that run part way across the ceiling. At right angles to these coves, seven light troughs run from the proscenium arch across the ceiling as far back as the arc room, which is suspended from the ceiling above the balcony cross over. 

The Architectural Forum, November, 1931, Pg. 564.

 

Ceiling detail of the auditorium.

Ceiling detail looking toward the rear of the auditorium from the proscenium arch. Image from The Architectural Forum, November, 1931, usmodernist.org.

 

Ceiling and wall details.

Details showing the ceiling lighting troughs and side wall decorations. View looking towards the proscenium arch. Image from Getty Images / New York Historical Society.

    The walls behind the cross-over are painted in black, gray and white horizontal bands. The ceiling itself is of hard plaster, the light coves being painted in aluminum-silver in color, separated by bands of black. The soffit is painted black with aluminum-painted recessed light channels curving gracefully across it. 

The Architectural Forum, November, 1931, Pg. 564.

 

 

   The legs of the proscenium are of molded plaster, and consist of a series of overhanging sections with concealed lights at each division. They are aluminum painted, as is the molded plaster proscenium arch itself. On either side of the arch is suspended a huge fixture that is designed to repeat the motif of the fluted proscenium legs. Additional lighting is supplied by a series of light panels that are recessed in the balcony front, which is painted black and gray.

The Architectural Forum, November, 1931, Pg. 564.

 

 

Flame color terra cotta paint on ceiling and proscenium arch accents, help to relieve the stark black and aluminum color scheme of the auditorium. Also brightening the auditorium were the seats with their varying shades of coral striped fabric. For the easing reading of programs during a performance, the back of the orchestra seats came equipped with small lights. No plain doors leading into the auditorium for the Earl Carroll Theatre! Modernistic etchings decorated the metal doors.

 

Detail of the orchestra seats.

The orchestra seats and mezzanine of the Earl Carroll Theatre. Reading lights on the back of the orchestra seats are clearly visible in the photograph. (Photo by Irving Browning/The New York Historical Society/Getty Images)

 

Program light detail.

Detail showing the light on the back of an orchestra seat in use. Image from Modern Mechanics and Inventions, January, 1932, Pg. 125.

 

Door and seat detail, Earl Carroll Theatre.

Detail of the etched metal doors and the stripped coral fabric on the seats. Image from Getty Images / New York Historical Society.

Another novel feature of the new theatre, a modernistic, chromium-plated water wagon offering refrigerated water to patrons. Operating and handling the heavy wagon called for male attendants of six feet in height or more wheeling it down the aisles between acts.

 

Water wagon for the Earl Carroll Theatre.

The chromium-plated water wagon and its attendants. Image from Modern Mechanics and Inventions, January, 1932, Pg. 124.

 

 

    There is not a light fixture in the auditorium. For the first time an auditorium contains four light circuits. From unseen sources the auditorium may be flooded with red, green, blue or white, or any combination of these colors. All lights including those flooding the stage and those upon the stage, are controlled and operated from a console. This new device is the first one ever created. It is no larger than a radio receiving set. It is operated in the same manner, by dials. The console is in the orchestra, just behind the musical director. The electrician wears evening clothes. He is called a light conductor and sees every effect he creates. The light console is probably the most notable contribution to theatre and production improvement of this decade. 

The Brooklyn Citizen Sun, September 13, 1931, Pg. 15.

 

Lighting console.

Looking down into the lighting console, located just behind the orchestra pit. Image from Modern Mechanics and Inventions, January, 1932, Pg. 125.

Backstage

The modernity of the new theatre did not end at the stage. Carroll made sure that the backstage would be just as modern and comfortable as the front of the house.

    Elaborate backstage improvements and decorations are among the features of the new theatre. A green room, and orchid room and a card room have been provided for the principals, chorus girls and stage hands, respectively, and musicians and house attachés also have special quarters. Each production department has a work room and laboratory, and intercommunicating telephones link all dressing rooms and studios. Safe deposit vaults, a refrigerator for flowers, shower rooms, a gymnasium, a “powder room” and mirror room for last-minute inspection of costumes have been installed for the convenience of the performers.

The New York Times, August 28, 1931, Pg. 22

 

Chorus girls dressing room.

Chorus girls dressing room. Image from Getty Images / New York Historical Society.

    The luxuries and comforts backstage sound more like the dreamings of a press agent than reality. But they are actually in evidence. Each girl has a beautiful dressing table. The old dressing shelf of former years has disappeared. 

The Brooklyn Citizen Sun, September 13, 1931, Pg. 15.

 

Chorus girls Orchid Room.

The circular orchid room for the chorus girls to relax in when not on stage performing. Image from The New York Public Library.

    The green and orchid rooms have magazines, writing materials and every comfort found in good clubs.

The Brooklyn Citizen Sun, September 13, 1931, Pg. 15.

A year before the opening of the two Radio City theatres, the Music Hall and the R.-K.-O. Roxy, the Earl Carroll Theatre’s stage introduced innovations that those theatres became famous for using.

    The disappearing orchestra, an Earl Carroll invention when he built his former theatre has been improved upon. Three orchestras may replace one another, and orchestras may be displaced by scenic effects, fountains or girls, at will, without interrupting the music. All parts of the stage may be lowered or elevated. There are two sets of counterweights on different levels  for handling of the scenery. Mr. Carroll, with his innovations, sets a new standard for revue productions.

The Brooklyn Citizen Sun, September 13, 1931, Pg. 15.

 

Lowered orchestra.

Lowered orchestra looking up toward the stage. Image from Modern Mechanics and Inventions, January, 1932, Pg. 125.

 

Orchestra pit lowered into the basement.

The orchestra pit lowered to the basement. Image from Getty Images / New York Historical Society.

No footlights along the edge of the stage at the new theatre. Here the “footlights” lined the front of the mezzanine and concealed microphones lined the foot of the stage.

 

View from the stage.

View of the auditorium showing lighting console, footlights along the mezzanine and concealed microphones in the stage. Image from Modern Mechanics and Inventions, January, 1932, Pg. 125.

A celebrity studded, capacity audience filled the theatre on opening night. And for the first few weeks Earl Carroll’s Ninth Vanities continued to pack the audiences into his popular price theatre. But the successful future for this most modern of all theatres was not to last. As the depression deepened attendance dropped off, and it became increasingly harder for Carroll to meet his financial obligations while running a very expensive Broadway revue.

 

This concludes the first chapter in the history of the second Earl Carroll Theatre. Part two will tell the story of its second life in the early 1930s.

 

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

CLICK HERE FOR PART TWO

Sources:

The Architectural Forum; November, 1931

The Banker’s Magazine; Volume 107

The Brooklyn Citizen Sun

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle

The Daily News

Lost New York, Nathan Silver, Houghton Mifflin Company, 1967

Modern Mechanics and Inventions; January, 1932

New York 1930 Robert A. M. Stern, Gregory Gilmartin, Thomas Mellins, Rizzoli, 1994

The New York Sun

The New York Times

Variety