The National Theatre (1911-1978) of Boston, Massachusetts, was a 3,500-seat multipurpose auditorium on Tremont Street in the South End. It functioned as a cinema, lecture hall, and stage. Performers included Jehovah's Witness founder Joseph F. Rutherford and "big-name entertainers like Duke Ellington and Ray Bolger." Movie screenings included The Battle of Gettysburg in 1913. The English High School held graduation exercises in the National. Around 1919 it was known as the "Waldorf Theater." In 1992, it was purchased by Philip Smith.
The space operated "intermittently after World War II for plays and movies." Among the audience members: clothing designer Joseph Abboud. The National closed in 1978. The Boston Center for the Arts oversaw the property thereafter, when it was subject to numerous plans for redevelopment. The building existed until 1997, when it was demolished.
Images
- National Theatre, Tremont St. (near Berkeley St.), Boston, 1911 (photo courtesy Boston Public Library)
- Advertisement for Tillie's Punctured Romance, with Charlie Chaplin, 1915
- Advertisement for "base ball machine" at the Hippodrome (i.e. National), 1915
- James Curley election campaign rally, 1917
- Advertisement for Rutherford at the National, 1920
References
- Boston Register and Business Directory. 1921.
National Theatre, no.535 Tremont St.
- Boston Globe, Dec 17, 1920
- Maureen Dezell (June 16, 1995). "National: bringing the house down?". Boston Globe. p. 61.
- Moving Picture World, July 5, 1913
- Boston Daily Globe, June 28, 1918
- Anthony Mitchell Sammarco (2006), Boston's South End, Arcadia Publishing, ISBN 9780738539492
- Los Angeles Times: "General Cinema More Wall St. Than Hollywood : Investments Pay Off Handsomely for Bottler and Theater-Chain Operator" by Kathryn Harris August 11, 1985
- Maureen Dezell (October 28, 1994), "City to study theater revamp at BCA", Boston Globe, p. 50
- Rhonda Stewart (November 25, 2004), "Abboud had early designs on his career", Boston Globe
- Christine Temin (October 4, 1981), "BCA still building, still struggling", Boston Globe
- "Striar aims to reopen National by '87", Boston Globe, p. 74, April 3, 1986
- Jeff McLaughlin (September 26, 1986), "Arts Center to renovate historic theater", Boston Globe, p. 47
- Boston Center for the Arts (1991), Preliminary report on site development opportunities, OL 24634625M
- Boston Globe, August 8, 1996
- Patti Hartigan (February 27, 1998), "Druker Co. will develop BCA site", Boston Globe
External links
- Bostonian Society:
- Photo of National Theatre at 535 Tremont Street, 1931
- Photo of 535 Tremont Street, ca. 1946
42°20′41.15″N 71°4′15.63″W / 42.3447639°N 71.0710083°W / 42.3447639; -71.0710083
Categories:- South End, Boston
- Demolished buildings and structures in Boston
- 1911 establishments in Massachusetts
- 1978 disestablishments in Massachusetts
- Cultural history of Boston
- 20th century in Boston
- Former cinemas and movie theaters in Boston
- Former theatres in Boston
- Event venues established in 1911
- Buildings and structures demolished in 1997