Defunct Yiddish theater
Yiddish theater poster for "Saints and Sinners" at Jennie Goldstein's National Theatre (1935)
The National Theatre was a Yiddish theater at the southwest corner of Chrystie Street and Houston Street in the Yiddish Theater District in Manhattan , New York City, United States.[ 1] When first built it was leased to Boris Thomashefsky and Julius Adler .[ 2] Its grand opening as the Adler-Thomashefsky National Theatre was on September 24, 1912.[ 3] [ 4]
The theater was one of the many designed by architect Thomas W. Lamb , and seated 1,900 when it opened. It was built as one of a pair of theaters, with the Crown Theater , seating 963, in the rooftop theater.[ 5] Both theaters closed in 1941, re-opened in 1951 as a pair of cinemas (the National Theater and the Roosevelt Theater ), and were demolished in 1959.[ 2]
References
^ Stein, Joshua David (26 January 2007). "See the Lower East Side: If Not Now, When?" . Gridskipper . Archived from the original on 25 January 2013. Retrieved 27 March 2011 .
^ a b "National Theatre & Roosevelt Theatre" . Cinema Treasures . Retrieved March 27, 2011 .
^ Zylbercweig, Zalmen (1934). "Tomashefsky, Boris " (in Yiddish) . Leksikon fun yidishn teater [Lexicon of the Yiddish theatre]. Vol. 2. Warsaw: Farlag Elisheva. Columns 804-840; here: col. 822.
^ "Grand Opening of the Adler-Thomashefsky National Theatre, Houston St. and Second Avenue " [program] (1912). New York: Lipshitz Press. For performance on September 24, 1912. Digitized version retrieved via the New York Public Library , December 26, 2016.
^ Thissen, Judith (April 16, 2023). "Curtain Falls on the Sunshine…" . Digital Yiddish Theatre Project . March 12, 2018. Retrieved April 18, 2023 .
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