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42nd Street in Times Square is simultaneously the bane of most New Yorkers’ existence but also a treasure trove of historic remnants if you know where to look. Examples include the architectural details of the former Empire Theater visible in the lobby of the AMC Theater a building which was literally moved 168 feet west along 42nd Street in 1997. But just next door is an even juicier find: the remnants of the Liberty Theater, originally located at 236 W. 42nd Street.
When walking down the street today, it’s impossible to imagine the grand Neo-Classical theater that was once the Liberty, as there is no visible remnant of the theater along 42nd Street. But the Liberty Theater was a 20,000 square foot Broadway theater that could seat 1000 guests, designed by Herts & Tallant for the theater production duo Klaw and Erlanger. It operated for Broadway productions from 1904 to 1933 and was then converted into a movie theater. It went dark by the 1980s and was purchased by the City of New York for the redevelopment of 42nd Street. The theater has re-opened only briefly for shows like a performance of T.S. Eliot’s Wasteland in 1996 and Cynthia von Buhler’s Speakeasy Dollhouse: Midnight Frolic, an almost year-long immersive play, in 2015, but remains intact behind the complex overlay of new entertainment spaces along 42nd Street.
Perhaps the largest visible remnant of the Liberty Theater is on the rear facade along 41st Street, right next to the back entrance of the Hilton hotel. The approximately five-story brick facade, with a castle-inspired crenellation at the top, well-maintained green doors and vintage globe lamps, is now ensconced within the larger Hilton hotel complex that has been built around it.
But on the 42nd Street side, the original Neoclassical facade, is all gone. A visual description was provided in Lost Broadway Theatres by Nicholas Van Hoogstraten in 1997 (an excerpt posted on Cinema Treasures):
The Neo-Classical inspired facade, with a set of caryatides flanking the main entry four stories tall. A huge arched window was surmounted by a carving of the Liberty Bell, and at the summit of the facade was a large stone American eagle, its wings spread and staring downwards to the sidewalk below.
A stunning ticket counter was located in a vestibule in the lobby, which was topped with a large dome, covered in gilding and aluminum. A promenade led to the staircase leading to the balconies and the orchestra seating, with an ivory, amber and gold color theme.
What was once the lobby is partially now the entrance to Ripley’s Believe it or Not, but if you enter the Applebee’s and Dave & Buster complex you can still see another part of the lobby which was converted first into Famous Dave’s BBQ and then into the Liberty Diner, a reference to the former theater. Though shuttered since 2015 when the operators lost the lease, the diner once provided access to the auditorium itself, which as Van Hoogstraten confirms, was actually located on 41st Street.
Cynthia von Buhler kindly provided us photographs of the inside of the Liberty Theater from her 2015 immersive play, the Ziegfeld Midnight Frolic. Like all of the impressive plays produced by von Buhler, guests entered a whole new world, in this case, going through the hidden door in the Liberty Diner and stepping into one of impresario Florenz Ziegfeld’s extravaganzas in 1920. You can see from the photographs the intricate details that still remain of the the theater, including ornamented balconies, the stage proscenium, and box seats.
von Buhler is now producing the The Illuminati Ball, which takes place inside at Weylin B. Seymour in the Williamsburgh Savings Bank as well as at a secret waterfront estate this summer, where guests experience a recreation of a 1972 Rothschild party. You can see photographs from that experience here.
Inside the Liberty Theater. Photo courtesy Speakeasy Dollhouse: Ziegfeld Midnight Frolic by Arin Sang-urai
Photo courtesy Speakeasy Dollhouse: Ziegfeld Midnight Frolic by Mark Shelby Perry
Photo courtesy Speakeasy Dollhouse: Ziegfeld Midnight Frolic by Mark Shelby Perry
Next, check out the Top 10 Secrets of Times Square and learn more about the area’s past on our Remnants of Gritty Old Times Square Walking Tour!
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