Columbia Theater (Washington, D.C.)

The Columbia Theatre, located at 1112 F Street NW, Washington, DC 20004, was a theater built and opened in 1891, closed and demolished in 1959. The Arnold & Porter Building is on the site today.[1][2]

Loew's Fox Theatre

The theater was taken over by Marcus Loew in 1915 in his first Loew's Theaters venture outside New York, to present vaudeville and movies. Among them Going Native was a 1940 and 1941 annual revue show Arthur Godfrey was staged and produced by Eugene Forde.[3]

gollark: I'm thinking about adding better Markov capabilities to ABR.
gollark: <@398575402865393665> should really be storing original message contents for apiopurposes like training a good AI later.
gollark: Yes they are. I consider anything over 40 minutes long and also never go anywhere.
gollark: I suppose the US is bigger, here you can basically get anywhere in the country in 10 hours or so max of driving time.
gollark: > not that far> 2 hours of driving

References

  1. Robert K. Headley - Motion Picture Exhibition in Washington, D.C. 1999 1476608512 p250 "... as he began to expand his movie empire. In October 1919, Loew and Walter Brownley of Washington purchased the Columbia and two buildings on 12th Street for half a million dollars. The Columbia was one of the big moneymakers among ..."
  2. http://cinematreasures.org/theaters/7369
  3. Going Native 1941 "The second annual edition of Loew's Fox all Washington revue "Going Native," a salute to Washington and Washingtonians, Louis K. Sidney personally supervised this production, staged and produced by Gene Ford, dances staged by Margorie"


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