Wednesday, May 22, 2013

The Remnants of the 1912 Audubon Theatre and Ballroom --Broadway at 165th St.


photo by wikiWhat as part of Wikipedia Takes Manhattan Project

In 1912, three years before he would immortalize his name by founding the Fox Film Corporation (later to become 20th Century-Fox), the Hungarian-born William Fox embarked on an ambitious project in the rapidly-developing Washington Heights.  The area was ripe for a multi-functional entertainment venue and Fox sought out the services of theater architect Thomas W. Lamb to fill the void.
Filling the block on Broadway between 165th and 166th Streets, the dual-purpose Audubon Hall opened for business on November 28, 1912.  Lamb had created a 2,368-seat theater on the first floor, and on the second a “ballroom” and an assembly-type room that seated 200 persons.   Lamb lavished the two-story structure with mythological imagery and Roman-inspired motifs.    The colorful terra cotta façade featured griffins in the spandrels of the rhythmic two-story arches that defined the building.  Above the entrance an immense head of Poseidon served as the figurehead to an approaching Roman galley, before which a mermaid swam toward the passerby.

photo by wikiWhat as part of Wikipedia Takes Manhattan Project

Paired, monumental Roman columns flanked the entrance and, with a nod to the dramatic arts inside, a series of lyres lined the grand arch.  Colorful satyr heads appeared throughout the design—over the entrance, within the lyres of the arch, and within the column capitals, for instance.
The architect strayed from the mythical theme by including full-relief terra cotta fox heads between each arch, an obvious nod to his patron.

Fox heads pay tribune to William Fox --photo by wikiWhat as part of Wikipedia Takes Manhattan Project (photo cropped)

Inside Lamb carried on the Roman motif.  Reportedly, the auditorium boxes featured satyr heads flanked by maidens.
While vaudeville played downstairs, the Audubon Ballroom upstairs offered dance lessons, including all the latest fads, and events like dance contests.  The Ballroom was managed by George D. Grundy, a master of marketing who packed the space through special events.   He scored a coup in January 1919 when he lured the Dancing Carnival away from the Grand Central Palace where it had been traditionally held.
The Evening World, on January 18, reported that “The Audubon Ballroom of the Dancing Carnival, formerly at the Grand Central Palace, is being patronized by so many of its former friends that it seems like the original place.  The management has provided a place for the whole family to enjoy dancing.”
The newspaper went on to say that “The Audubon provides an evening’s amusement for slight cost.  Men are admitted for 40 cents, women 25 cents.  They can dance to their hearts’ content.”


Fifty-cents bought eight dance lessons in 1916 -- The Evening World, December 4, 1916 (copyright expired)

By 1921 the Audubon Theater was offering motion pictures as well as vaudeville.    One of the acts during Christmas Week that year involved trained seals.  Early in the morning of December 27 fire broke out in the cellar of the Corn Exchange Bank next door.
The fire spread rapidly into the Ballroom.  Meanwhile firefighters fought to save the theater portion.  “Firemen kept the flames from the Audubon Theater, a motion picture and vaudeville house, at the south end of the building, and rescued, much against their will, three trained seals which were backstage in their cages,” reported the New-York Tribune.
The New York Times reported that several firemen were hurt fighting the blaze.  The Ballroom “was put out of commission” and the lobby of the theater  was heavily damaged by water.
With the Ballroom repaired, George Grundy jumped at the latest fad of the Roaring Twenties:  the dance marathon.   The craze had swept the country’s large cities and young men and women vied to capture the endurance title.  The problem was that communities, including New York City, began outlawing the contests out of concern for the dancers’ physical well-being.
On Saturday March 31 at 6:57 p.m. Alma Cummings started dancing.  As George Grundy kept vigil, the 32-year old Alma (whose real name surname was Stappenback) danced the fox trot, waltz and one-step with one young man after another.  When the band quit for the night, two phonographs kept the music playing. 
Alma was a dance instructor at the Audubon Ballroom and 27 hours later was still hoofing her way around the floor.    On Sunday night the band which, according to The New York Times “had slept, eaten, been to church and returned,” played “The Star-Spangled Banner” and Alma Cummings was declared world champion (without police interference).  She attributed her success to being from Texas and “in part to nine years of vegetarian diet.”
The achievement sparked perhaps the most astounding incident in dance marathon history.  A month later a group of young people started dancing here in an effort to crush Alma’s record.  After 28 hours and 50 minutes there were still five men and three women dancing.  And then word arrived that the police were on the way.   Parents and friends rushed to obtain a moving van.  The phonographs were taken aboard and the contestants danced their way into the van. 
The hoofers danced inside the van as it took them to the ferry to New Jersey.  Once on the other side of the Hudson, another van moved them to the Pekin Dance Hall in Fort Lee, New Jersey.  But they were met by expectant police who made them move along.
Inside the van the dancers continued moving while they were transported to East Port Chester, Connecticut.  Local police allowed the last remaining dancer, Vera Sheppard, to continued until dawn broke on Sunday morning.  At that point they had to invoke the blue law and stop her dancing on the Sabbath.
Vera Sheppard had clearly broken the Alma’s record.  When she returned to the Audubon Ballroom (having danced through three states, a ferry boat and four moving vans) she received the unhappy news that simultaneously a girl in Cleveland, June Curry, had beaten her record.
The building caught fire again on January 12, 1927 while 800 people were viewing a motion picture.  As smoke entered the auditorium the patrons, many of them children, calmly gathered their belongings and filed out through emergency exits.  The organist, according to The New York Times the following day, played “Home Sweet Home” to keep the crowd calm.
“The lights of the theatre were turned on.  The doors were opened, and the wind carried in a great cloud of choking smoke,” reported the newspaper, “but not one person showed alarm.  Each walked out of the theatre in a normal way, and everyone reached the street without mishap.”
The three-alarm fire resulted in between $150,000 to $200,000 in damage to the auditorium and ballroom.  “The building, which is two stories high and of masonry, was burning throughout almost all its interior save the theatre auditorium,” said The New York Times.
Not all the events in the Ballroom during the Roaring Twenties ended happily.   On September 21, 1929 the Lantern Athletic Club hosted a dance.  Uninvited, 18-year old Betty Marshall and her date, 27-year old Jack King, crashed the party. 
The intrusion did not go unnoticed and King became involved in a confrontation with club members.  Shots were fired and Betty Marshall was shot in the chest and King in the shoulder.   Two stray shots hit the wall behind the pair.
When police arrived most of the revelers had fled and those who were left “could shed no light on the shooting.”  Betty Marshall was hospitalized in dangerous condition and, according to The Times, “The dance broke up.”
In 1946 the city was terrorized by a gang of youths ranging from 16 to 20 years old who committed thefts using two-way radios to communicate between the burglars and the look-outs.   The leader boasted he wanted to be the master mind of “the largest and brainiest gang in New York City.”
On April 30 that year the gang rented the Audubon Ballroom to throw a going-away party for a friend inducted into the Army.  The New York Times reported that they “invited 100 guests and made sure they had a supply of meat by stealing fifteen hams from the Swift & Co., plant at Twelfth Avenue and 131st Street.
“Needing funds to keep the party going, they broke into an automobile dealer’s office at 132d Street and Broadway and ‘cracked’ the safe, which contained several hundred dollars.  The party continued until well into the morning.”  A month later police arrested four gang members—two of them 16-years old, one 17 and one 20—for committing 75 burglaries, including 42 “safe jobs.”
After World War II the Audubon Theatre became the Beverly Hills Theater.  Later it was the San Juan, a Spanish movie house which finally closed in 1975.
Meanwhile upstairs, the Ballroom would earn infamy on February 21, 1965.  A year earlier Malcolm X had broken from the Nation of Islam, changed his name to El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz and began presenting a less confrontational and separatist stand on race relations.   In response he received numerous death threats from the Nation of Islam and on February 18, 1965 told The New York Times “I’m a marked man.  It doesn’t frighten me for myself as long as I felt they would not hurt my family.”  He added “No one can get out without trouble, and this thing with me will be resolved by death and violence.”
Death and violence came three days later when the 39-year old stood up at the Audubon Ballroom to address the Organization of Afro-American Unity.    He was gunned down by assassins later identified as Black Muslims.  His death, however, became a sort of martyrdom that raised him to a symbol of black pride.
The stage and podium where Malcolm X was assassinated was photographed immediately after -- photograph Library of Congress

Throughout the 1970s the care-worn Audubon Ballroom above the empty theater was a favorite venue for prize fights.    Eventually, though, that too closed and, having been taken by the City for back taxes, the old William Fox Theatre Building sat empty and deteriorating.
Then, in 1983, Columbia University purchased the building for back taxes and announced plans to build “a space-age medical research center on the site.”
In reporting on the impending demolition, The New York Times said “The two-story ballroom on the corner of 166th Street and Broadway…was a major showcase for jazz, popular and bigband music during the late 1930’s, the 40’s and early 50’s.  It became the focus of national attention in February 1965 when Malcolm X was shot to death there.”

The announcement sparked protests from African American community activists, preservationists and Columbia University students.  Even after demolition began the protest waged on, with Manhattan Borough President Ruth Messinger among its most outspoken leaders.

Outraged, The New York Times called Messinger obstructionist and irresponsible and warned readers that saving the Audubon Ballrom “could hasten the decline of a deteriorating community and leave those who want to honor Malcom X, murdered in the ballroom 25 years ago, with nothing but a building in ruins.”

Despite the newspaper’s ranting, a compromise was reached to preserve about two-thirds of the original face and about 40 percent of the remaining Ballroom.   An excruciating $7 million restoration was initiated on the exterior and what was left of the Ballroom.

In 2005 the Malcom X and Dr. Betty Shabazz memorial and educational facility opened while behind the six-story Center for Commercial Biotech Research building, designed by Davis, Brody & Associates was erected.
The restoration brought the colorful terra cotta facade, nearly lost, back to life -- photo by wikiWhat as part of Wikipedia Takes Manhattan Project

The New York Preservation Archive Project notes that “the compromise exemplifies that preservation can work with new development by using innovative solutions for its protection.”

many thanks to reader Connie Allen for requesting this post

1 comment:

  1. Hello,

    Thank you for sharing this information. I was wondering if you could recommend any sources on the history of Audubon Theatre and Ballroom.

    ReplyDelete