In 1903 architect Victor Hugo Koehler’s impressive Lyric Theater opened on 42nd Street. The Longacre Square
area, which would be renamed Times Square the following year, was seeing an
explosion in legitimate theater construction.
But blocks to the south and less noticed, another theater
designed by Koehler opened that same year. The Grand Street neighborhood was a mixed bag of
stores and tenements; its population composed mainly of German Jews. The Grand Street Theatre was intended to offer this
Lower East Side audience with Yiddish plays—a world apart from the fare
produced in the Lyric.
Architecturally the Grand Street Theatre shared much with is
uptown counterpart. Working in brick,
stone and terra cotta, Koehler embellished the façade with neo-classical motifs—pushing
the elaborate ornamentation to the edge of taste without slipping over it. A classic balustrade along the roofline
sprouted a crop of unusual spiky pinnacles.
The theater sat on the site of the old Lord and Taylor store
at the southeast corner of Grand and Chrystie Streets. The property had been purchased by Elias A.
Cohen a few years earlier for $30,000, who resold it to developer Harry
Fischel. Fischel’s completed dual-purpose
structure would provide extra income with office space behind the theater
portion.
The theater—the first to be established solely for Yiddish
drama in New York--opened on February 4, 1903.
It was run by Russian actor Jacob Pavlovich Adler, who had attained
stardom in Odessa and later in London.
He was forced to leave Russian in 1883 when the Government prohibited
Yiddish theater. A serious actor, Adler
staged translations of classic and modern European plays. He recruited playwright Jacob Gordin who
wrote works like Der Yiddisher King Lear
(The Jewish King Lear) for Adler’s company.
photo Brockhaus and Efron Jewish Encyclopedia, 1906 (copyright expired) |
Two months after the theater opened, horror visited Adler’s
homeland. On April 19, 1903 Russian mobs
attacked the Jewish population of Kishinev.
When the two-day pogrom finally ended, 47 were dead and 92 severely
injured. More than 700 homes were
destroyed and 600 stores plundered.
The New York Times reported “The anti-Jewish riots in Kishinev, Bessarabia, are worse than the
censor will permit to publish. There was a well laid-out plan for the general
massacre of Jews on the day following the Russian Easter. The mob was led by priests,
and the general cry, ‘Kill the Jews,’ was taken- up all over the city. The Jews
were taken wholly unaware and were slaughtered like sheep.”
Adler quickly went
into action, and a play, The Jew in Roumania, was written that depicted
the atrocity. The New York Times on May
19 announced “Benefit performances are to be given at the Grand Street Theatre
Friday evening and Saturday afternoon and evening. The management and actors have agreed to give
a new version of the recent tragedy in Russia the proceeds to go to the general
fund.”
Another benefit
performance of the play was staged on June 1.
Among those making a statement by their presence were the powerful
Episcopal Bishop of New York, Henry C. Potter; the Manhattan Borough President;
and Supreme Court Justice Greenbaum.
Jacob Adler ensured
his ability to control the dramatic content of the Grand Street Theatre in
February the following year. On February
5, 1904 The Evening World announced “Jacob P. Adler, the Jewish tragedian, has
bought the stock of all the shareholders of the Grand Theatre, in Grand street,
and now becomes the sole proprietor and manager.”
The newspaper added
“Mr. Adler will appear there next Friday evening, together with his wife, Mme.
Sarah Adler, in ‘Broken Hearts.” During
the season he will be seen in ‘The Merchant of Venice,’ ‘King Lear,’ ‘The
Martyr of France’ and ‘Uriel Acosta.’”
Also appearing in Broken
Hearts would be Stella, the Adlers’ four-year old daughter. It would be her
first appearance on the stage; the initial step in a vibrant dramatic and
coaching career.
Three weeks after
the announcement Adler tried something new: grand opera. On February 29 he staged The Demon, a
variation of Faust. The Sun ran a
sarcastic review the following day, saying “It was the eve of Purim, the Ghetto
festival for which the slogan is ‘Be happy.’ And they were happy. What if the heroine threw herself in tears
upon the dead body of her beloved?
Laughter quivered throughout the room.
They were happy.”
The newspaper said the
actors “were all amateurs, except Herman Kaminsky, who sang Prince Goudal. He was once in the Imperial Grand Opera at
St. Petersburg, but that must have been long ago, because he’s so old.”
The Sun continued,
saying “with the many little accidents on the stage, one might have been at a
farce. The curtain went up too soon and
a solitary little man madly clinging to it, yelling and gesticulating, started
off the amusement. The headgear of Mme. Rombro Krantz, who sang Tamara,
would persist in slipping off at the most crucially sad points and the house
shook with laughter when tears ought to have been flowing. But everybody had a capital time.”
The New-York
Tribune looked at Jacob Adler and his productions with suspicion. On October 25, 1904 it wrote “The Grand
Street playhouse is where the plays of Jacob Adler, the Socialist, are brought
out. About everything produced there has
a Socialist cast.”
In actuality, Adler
was being controlled by the Yiddish actor’s union. The Sun called the union the “real octopus in
the ghetto” that “rules the Yiddish stage.”
The union’s power was such that when Jacob Adler wanted his non-union sister-in-law,
Mrs. J. Louis, for a part in an upcoming play, the union nixed it. “He was anxious that Mrs. Louis should appear
with his company, believing her to possess real talent. But she cannot appear
even in Mr. Adler’s theatre,” said The Sun on April 10, 1904.
It became too much
for Sara Adler, and during the performance of Uriel Acosta, she “suddenly
drew herself up to the full measure of her stately height, and with dramatic
emphasis hissed out a line not in the play.
‘Union actors!’ cried Mrs. Adler, altogether forgetting the part of Judith,”
reported The Sun. “Scorn and rage were
in her words.”
Adler’s continued
conflict with the United Hebrew Trades union came to a climax on September 6,
1906. The union had insisted that he
fire a musician, who was a member of a different union, and replace him with
one of their own. Adler refused. It resulted in the “actors, scene shifters,
musicians, ushers, chorus singers and all” walking of the theater and shutting
it down.
The strike was
settled, but the relationship between Adler and the union would continue to be
contentious.
Patrons were
blissfully unaware of the labor difficulties; and on October 13, 1907 three
audience members were concerned only with what they felt was a tepid
production. That night was the opening
of God, Man and the Devil, called by the New-York Tribune “a thrilling
drama.” The newspaper estimated the
audience at about 2,000.
Samuel Hirsch,
Harry Optaker, and Samuel Fraedlin were in the balcony. The Tribune said “the performance was not
sufficiently ‘thrilling’ to meet the approval of some of the occupants of
gallery seats.” Before the end of the
final act, the men leaned over the railing and yelled out the derisive term “Supe!”
Unfortunately, many
in the audience below mistook “Supe!” for “Fire!” and panic washed over the
crowd. “Only the activity of the special
police prevented accidents in the rush that followed,” reported the newspaper. The three men were arrested, “but discharged
for lack of proof.”
The audience of the
Yiddish theater was almost entirely Jewish.
So it was understandable that weekend productions were staged on Sunday—the
day after the Jewish Sabbath. New York
City law did not see it that way, however.
On Sunday November 11, 1908 Patrolmen Reilly and Cooney entered the
theater during a performance of Charity.
On stage at the time were Jacob Adler and Samuel Greenberg. The actors were arrested, as were the manager
Leopold Spachner, and staff members Max Heine and Patrick Mackey. They were charged with “conducting a dramatic
performance on Sunday.”
Adler’s attorney,
Abraham Levy, tried a novel defense. The
Sun reported “Abe Levy tried to prove to the Magistrate that I was something in
the way of a sacred concert, but was not successful.” The judge held the men at $500 bail.
The following year,
frustrated with being under the control of the United Hebrew Trades Union,
Adler decided not to open for the new season.
The Reform Advocate explained on September 4, 1909 “Last Friday
evening was scheduled as the opening night of the Yiddish theatrical season on
the East Side. This did not occur,
however, in all the four Yiddish theatres, because the managers find it
impossible to meet running expenses under the existing conditions…Jacob Adler
does not intend to open his Grand Street Theatre at all, and will re-lease it
to a moving picture show.”
A reporter from The
New York Times asked Adler what his personal plans were. “Whatever I do I shall no longer have a
theatre on the east side,” he replied. “The demands made by the unions have
made it impossible to continue…Now the unions have made all sorts of impossible
demands, asking me to engage actors, which I cannot possibly use among other
things, I see no reason to continue the struggle when other opportunities are
open to me.”
Adler leased the
theater to the Bedford Theatrical Company.
By 1913 Marcus Loew was screening motion pictures in the theater.
By now the
growing Little Italy neighborhood was changing the face of Grand Street. One Italian immigrant entered the darkened balcony on
February 1, 1914 only to find his girlfriend sitting with another Italian
man. “He started right in to make a
disturbance,” reported The Times the next day.
“There was some cursing and a scuffle, and from the surrounding seats
other patrons of the family circle called out: ‘Don’t fight! Don’t fight.’”
As had been the
case several years earlier, patrons heard “Fire!” instead. The 1,600 people in the theater rushed up the
aisles and onto Grand Street. A
passerby pulled the alarm box, and before long fire engines were clanging up
the street.
When calm was
finally restored, “every one began to feel sheepish,” said The Times. “There was a gust of laughter and the tide
turned. Every man, woman, and child
started back to the auditorium.” Attendants
could not check the tickets of the swarm and “they could not stop the rest of
Grand Street that decided to enter the theatre at this moment.” Much of the Grand Street neighborhood was
treated to a free movie that evening.
John Rothwick, a
41-year old married man, discovered that women in 1921 were not the shy,
defenseless girls of a generation ago.
On May 16 that year he noticed a pretty 18-year old girl in the balcony
of the Grand Street Theatre. He sat down
next to Christina Belsky and began “annoying” her. According to The Evening World the next day “The
girl asked him to stop, she said, but he continued, and after fifteen minutes
she seized him and, followed by a large crowd, took him to the Clinton Street
Police Station, where she had him arrested.”
By 1926, the year
that Jacob Adler died, vaudeville had joined motion pictures at the Grand
Street Theatre. Vaudeville skits
routinely pushed the limits of what 1920s officials deemed appropriate. On September 21 that year 21 women, three men
and the manager, Nock Elliott, were arrested for “giving an indent performance,
while the manager is charged with allowing it,” as reported in The Times.
The Grand Street
district continued to change and by 1930 was part of the growing
Chinatown. On April 6 that year Grace
Lynn, writing for The New York Times, reported on a Chinese production staged
by the Wong Society.
“Members of the
society, distinguished by red roses in their coat lapels, were entitled to
front orchestra seats. The rest of the
populace occupied every inch of space, overflowing from boxes and standing many
rows deep.” Lynn was perplexed when “The
audience came and went during the performance, some of its members even
visiting backstage. The noise of their
chattering, the opening of doors and the moving of many feet, intolerable to
Occidentals, disturbed the imperturbability of neither audience nor actors.”
The Wong Society
performance would be among the last in the Grand Street Theatre. In 1929 the City of New York had acquired all
the property between Chrystie and Forsyth Streets. The plan was to widen both
streets and to build low-cost housing.
But instead, all the buildings in three-block section from East Houston
Street to Canal Street were demolished before 1934—including the Grand Street
Theatre in 1930—for the 7.8-acre Sara Delano Roosevelt Park.
wow love the box front 3D reliefs of cherubs and such. Awesome, With or without the Cites interference it wouldn't have survived anyway beyond the 40's or 50's. A loss for sure
ReplyDeleteThis was a great expansion of a favorite old subject, thank you. I was long aware of the Grand and Jacob P. Adler's legendary presence. This is discussed, fairly emotionally, in "The Golden Age of 2nd Avenue" - an overview of the Yiddish Theater. Adler apparently made it onto the Grand stage once more, not long before his death, where Yiddish Theater veterans and audience members with long memories wept at the sight of him. It was delightful to see an interior shot and to be taken back to a rather skittish time where Jews could get in trouble, in their own neighborhood, for staging a play on the more widely-observed "sabbath". 2nd Avenue, of course, really became Broadway as we have known it now for a good 90 years.
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