New York’s Top 10 : Times Square and Theater District (part 2) – Theaters

Theaters

  1. Lyceum

    The oldest playhouse boasts a vaulted ceiling, murals, and elaborate plasterwork. Often used as an auxiliary for Lincoln Center.

    • 149–157 West 45th St




    Lyceum

  2. New Victory Theater

    Built for Oscar Hammerstein in 1900, this had resorted to X-rated films until restored in 1995 to present family entertainment.

    • 209 West 42nd St




    New Victory Theater

  3. Hilton Theater

    The
    rundown Lyric and Apollo were combined to form this showcase for
    musicals in 1998, marking the arrival of corporate sponsorship for
    theaters.

    • 214 West 42nd St




    Hilton Theater

  4. Shubert Theater

    Built
    in 1912–13 as a lavish site for musicals and headquarters for the
    Shubert Organization. The Booth, opposite, was built at this time.

    • 221–33 West 44th St

  5. New Amsterdam Theater

    This Art Nouveau beauty housed the famous Ziegfield Follies. Restored by Disney, it is home to the popular Mary Poppins.

    • 214 West 42nd St

  6. Hudson Theater

    A restrained façade belies the lavish interior, including an inner lobby with a classical arcade and domes of Tiffany glass.

    • 139–141 West 44th St




    Hudson Theater

  7. Belasco Theater

    A
    1907 monument to impresario David Belasco, who supervised the unusual
    Georgian Revival design. The rooftop duplex was his personal residence.

    • 111–121 West 44th St

  8. Lunt-Fontaine Theater

    Originally the Globe (finished in 1910); part of the roof of this venue could be removed to create an open-air auditorium.

    • 203–217 West 46th St

  9. Palace Theater

    Sarah
    Bernhardt inaugurated the stage, and playing the Palace became the
    ultimate assignment. Now restored as a venue for musicals.

    • 1564 Broadway

  10. Winter Garden Theater

    Originally
    the American Horse Exchange in 1885, this was acquired by the Shuberts
    in 1910 and remodeled in 1922. Until 2000, it was the home of Cats.

    • 1634 Broadway

A Brief History of New York Theater

The first of
countless theaters built in New York is thought to have been the New
Theater, erected in lower Manhattan in 1732. The city’s theatrical
center steadily moved uptown to the Bowery, then Astor Place, Union
Square, and Herald Square, until it settled for good around Longacre
Square (now Times Square), following the opening of Oscar Hammerstein’s
Olympia Theater on Broadway in 1895. Some 85 theaters were built over
the next three decades, many with grand Beaux Arts interiors by
architects such as Herbert J. Krapp, and Herts and Tallant, the latter
responsible for designing cantilevered balconies that eliminated the
need for columns. Impresarios like the Shuberts and the Chanins made
theater-going more democratic by blurring the class distinction between
orchestra and balconies, using a single entrance for all. As modern
theaters replaced them, more than 40 of these beauties have been
demolished. Fortunately, the rest have now been designated landmarks.




Oscar Hammerstein

Top 10 Broadway Shows


  1. The Phantom of the Opera


  2. Jersey Boys


  3. Chicago


  4. The Lion King


  5. Mamma Mia!


  6. South Pacific


  7. Avenue Q


  8. Wicked


  9. Mary Poppins


  10. West Side Story