Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Vanderbilt Theatre

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Type
  
Broadway

Opened
  
7 March 1918

Architect
  
Eugene De Rosa

Closed
  
1954

Capacity
  
780 (est.)

Address
  
148 West 48th Street Manhattan, New York City

Current use
  
Replaced by parking facility

Years active
  
1918 – 1939 1953 – 1954

Similar
  
Daly's 63rd Street Theatre, Broadway Theatre, Lyric Theatre, Central Theatre, Fulton Theatre

Vanderbilt theatre top 5 facts


The Vanderbilt Theatre was a New York City Broadway theatre, designed by architect Eugene De Rosa for producer Lyle Andrews. It opened in 1918, located at 148 West 48th Street. The theatre was demolished in 1954.

Contents

The 780-seat theatre hosted the long-running musical Irene from 1919 to 1921. In the mid-1920s, several Rodgers and Hart musicals played at the theatre. Andrews lost the theatre during the Great Depression, and in 1931 it was briefly renamed the Tobis to show German films. The experiment was a failure, and the theatre returned to legitimate use. No new shows played at the theatre from 1939 until 1953, as it was used as a radio studio, first by NBC, then by ABC, until 1952. Irving Maidman purchased the theatre and began to produce new shows in 1953, but after only a year, the theatre was demolished - replaced by a 6-storey parking garage.

Notable productions

  • 1919: Irene
  • 1926: The Girl Friend
  • 1926: Peggy-Ann
  • 1927: A Connecticut Yankee
  • 1935: Mulatto by Langston Hughes
  • References

    Vanderbilt Theatre Wikipedia