Playhouse Theatre (Portland, Oregon)

Playhouse Theatre (formerly known as Baker Theatre, Dufwin, Alcazar, Music Box, and El Capitan) was a theatre in Portland, Oregon, in the United States.

Playhouse Theatre
Baker Theatre depicted in The Oregonian in 1902
Former names
  • Baker Theatre
  • Dufwin
  • Alcazar
  • Music Box
  • El Capitan
LocationPortland, Oregon, United States
Capacity1,200 (Baker Theatre)
Construction
OpenedSeptember 17, 1910 (1910-09-17)
ClosedJune 1950 (theatre)
October 1953 (building)
Demolished1954

History

The venue opened as Baker Theatre, the city's second "palace", at the intersection of Southwest Morrison Street and 11th Avenue on September 17, 1910. Previously, the building served as a livery stable, and was built to house the Baker Players (operated by George Luis Baker). However, poor acoustics forced the venue to close shortly after opening and undergo a two-month-long redesign.[1]

The theatre's original seating capacity was 1,200 people. Subsequent names for the venue included: Dufwin, Alcazar, Music Box, and El Capitan. Its name was changed to Playhouse Theatre in 1932; from then on, the venue mostly showed films. Playhouse closed in June 1950, and the building was used for church services and occasional stage events until finally closing in October 1953. The building was demolished in 1954.[1]

gollark: America does it based on how "interesting" you are or something. Which is especially bee.
gollark: Generally, people make some sort of judgement about how good you'd be for the course based on a personal statement and maybe interview. The issue is that this is very subjective and bee.
gollark: I mean, qualifications don't map perfectly to subject goodness. And there's significant random noise.
gollark: Um.
gollark: I think the "holistic admission" thing is more of an Americanism.

References

  1. Lacher, Gary; Stone, Steve (2009). Theatres of Portland. Arcadia Publishing. p. 26.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.