Gay movie theaters in nyc
overview
Opened in , the Times Square Theater staged a number of productions involving major LGBT performers and creators, including Katharine Cornell, Tallulah Bankhead, Laurence Olivier, and Noel Coward, among others.
Operating relatively briefly as a legitimate theater, the venue became a movie theater in and the interior was demolished in
Header Photo
Credit: Christopher D. Brazee/NYC LGBT Historic Sites Venture,
Katharine Cornell in A Bill of Divorcement, Photo by Alabaster Studio. Courtesy of the Museum of the City of Fresh York.
The Exciters poster, Source:
Beatrice Lillie in Andre Charlot's Revue of . Photo by Alabaster Studio. Courtesy of the Museum of the City of Modern York.
Laurence Olivier and Noel Coward in Private Lives, Source:
Tallulah Bankhead and Ilka Chase in Forsaking All Others, Photo by Vandamm. Courtesy of the Museum of the City of Fresh York.
Apollo and Times Square Theaters. Photo by Wurts Bros, Courtesy of The New York Widespread Library.
The Times Square Theater
'Rise & Fall of the Adonis: NYC’s Most Notorious Homosexual Adult Cinema' Webinar
Tickets: $12 (includes access to the complete replay for one week)
Click the link below to officially register for this experience:
Between and , the Adonis Theater on Eighth Road between 50th and 51st Streets was New York City's largest and most popular gay senior movie theater. It anchored what was then known as the "Minnesota Strip" — an infamous stretch of Eighth Avenue best acknowledged for its porno theaters, peep shows, and prostitutes. How did this iconic theater come to be and what roles did politics, real estate, health, and technology own in its go up and fall? It's time to examine the stories behind one of Recent York's most notorious movie theaters.
Join Modern York Adventure Club as we bring out the history of the Adonis Theater, from when the building first opened in as the Tivoli Theater to its demise in the s after serving as Modern York City's most notorious adult all-male film theatre for a decade.
Led by licensed NYC tour guide Robert Brenner, our virtual trial surrounding the Adoni
Stephen Sondheim Theater (originally Henry Miller’s Theater)
History
This venue was originally known as Henry Miller’s Theater. One fairly achieving gay-themed play appeared at the Henry Miller prior to the Wales Padlock Law (), which forbade the depiction of “sex perversion” on stage. Noel Coward had become a sensation in England in his play The Vortex, which he transferred here for his American debut in Coward’s traits was a closeted lgbtq+ man. The biggest LGBT-associated hit at the Henry Miller was Born Yesterday (), with Judy Holliday (opened at the Lyceum Theater). Another big hit was Dear Ruth (), with John Dall.
Productions by LGBT creators and with LGBT performers at the Henry Miller included:
- Lusmore (), with actor Eva Le Gallienne
- The Intimate Strangers (), with actor Alfred Lunt
- The National Anthem (), with actor Laurette Taylor
- Baby Cyclone (), with actor Spencer Tracy
- Our Betters () by W. Somerset Maugham, with star Constance Collier
- The Sacred Flame () by W. Somerset Maugham
- Journey’s End (
The Phoenician Scheme
Now Showing
Wealthy businessman Zsa-zsa Korda appoints his only daughter, a nun, as sole heir to his estate. As Korda embarks on a new enterprise, they soon become the target of scheming tycoons, foreign terrorists and determined assassins.
Learn MoreNow Showing
After a stint in prison, a young dude returns to friends and family waiting for him across New York. Except his girl has moved on, money ain’t what it used to be and this isn’t the same bustling city he left behind. It’s all good.
Learn More
Post-film Q&A with $ECK and Rasan Kuvly.Now Displaying
A shady police detective finds himself in the middle of a murder conspiracy at an important boxing match in an Atlantic City casino.
Learn MoreNow Representing
This film made by a Palestinian-Israeli collective shows the destruction of the occupied West Bank’s Masafer Yatta by Israeli soldiers and the alliance which develops between the Palestinian activist Basel and Israeli journalist Yuval.
Learn MoreNow Showing
A team of astronauts land on an inhabitable planet and form a