Owner of Huntridge Theater says he reached out to community

Eli Mizrachi, the owner of the beloved Huntridge Theater, tells Las Vegas Sun Reporter, Joe Schoenmann that he tried to reach out to the city and the community in order to make the Huntridge Theater a viable business.

You can read about it here:

http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2008/mar/07/owner-says-hes-tried-find-use-huntridge/ 

 

If you know of anyone who tried to work with Mizrachi about keeping the Huntridge Theater open we would love to hear from you! 

You can comment here or email me at Lynn@classiclasvegas.com! 

Important Update on Saturday's Meeting about the Huntridge Theater

From one of the organizers, Josh Geidel:
 
 
Momentum continues to build.  Opinion continues to solidify. Information continues to gather.

The unique opportunity we have to voice our community opinion on the significance of the Huntridge Theatre draws closer at hand.

Due to the volume of response to our Saturday's Meeting we have decided to change venues.

NEW LOCATION:
Saturday, March 8th, 5:00pm
Downtown Cocktail Room
111 Las Vegas Boulevard

Michael Cornthwaite, the ever generous proprietor of the Downtown Cocktail Room, will be kindly opening his doors to us.  For this we are very grateful!

Pizza will still be on hand and continue to encourage folks to bring other dishes if they so choose.  Non-host beverages will be available through the bar.

Also, TONIGHT we will be gathering at LoPro, Downtown Cocktail Room's singular networking mixer to discuss agenda and topics for Saturday's meeting.  This is a great opportunity to familiarize yourself with one of Downtown Las Vegas's most significant weekly get togethers.  Thursday evening 4:30pm on.

Please Help:
*  Casual head counts might help.. to those of you mailing to "lists" please let know of your expected turn-out.  Individuals receiving this message... RSVP not required.
*  Trying to gather pertinent contact information, especially emails, in a central location.  If you have contact info of interested parties, please forward to me for database compilation.
*  SPREAD THE WORD!!!!     INVITE   E V E R Y O N E  ! ! !

NEWS and NOTES:
KNPR's State of Nevada- Eli Mizrachi, current owner of the Huntridge, and I will be appearing with Dave Berns on Monday March 10th's program during the 9:00am hour... please call in with your support, questions and insight.
Las Vegas Sun- Looking in on City Hall
http://lasvegassun.com/news/2008/mar/05/state-nances-may-stunt-effort-save-huntridge-theat/
Las Vegas Sun- Sun Editorial
http://lasvegassun.com/news/2008/mar/02/saving-past/
Las Vegas Sun- Joe Schoenemann's Breaking Story
http://lasvegassun.com/news/2008/feb/28/historic-huntridge-could-face-destruction/
www.SaveTheHuntridge.com- We are in-touch with a webmaster and bandwidth provider and are in the process of developing the page.  Please check back frequently and enjoy its development.
Classic Las Vegas- Blogged info:
http://classiclasvegas.squarespace.com/classic-las-vegas-blog/
http://classiclasvegas.squarespace.com/historic-site-of-the-week/2007/9/12/endangered-site-of-the-week.html
http://classiclasvegas.squarespace.com/classic-las-vegas-blog/2008/2/14/las-vegas-theaters-and-movies-i-remember.html
Very Vintage Vegas- Blogged info:
http://veryvintagevegas.com/
Lotta Living- Discussion Forum
http://www.lottaliving.com/bb/viewtopic.php?t=10491
Friends of the Huntridge- State Funding-- item 26
http://dmla.clan.lib.nv.us/DOCS/shpo/CCA/CCAProjects(2007-1993).htm
NRS Statute- Regarding Preservation
http://www.leg.state.nv.us/NRS/NRS-383.html
NRS Statute- Cultural Affairs
http://www.leg.state.nv.us/NRS/NRS-233C.html

Thanks everyone,
Looking forward to tonight and Saturday!!!The unique opportunity we have to voice our community opinion on the significance of the Huntridge Theatre draws closer at hand.

Due to the volume of response to our Saturday's Meeting we have decided to change venues.

NEW LOCATION:
Saturday, March 8th, 5:00pm
Downtown Cocktail Room
111 Las Vegas Boulevard

Michael Cornthwaite, the ever generous proprietor of the Downtown Cocktail Room, will be kindly opening his doors to us.  For this we are very grateful!

Pizza will still be on hand and continue to encourage folks to bring other dishes if they so choose.  Non-host beverages will be available through the bar.

Also, TONIGHT we will be gathering at LoPro, Downtown Cocktail Room's singular networking mixer to discuss agenda and topics for Saturday's meeting.  This is a great opportunity to familiarize yourself with one of Downtown Las Vegas's most significant weekly get togethers.  Thursday evening 4:30pm on.

Please Help:
*  Casual head counts might help.. to those of you mailing to "lists" please let know of your expected turn-out.  Individuals receiving this message... RSVP not required.
*  Trying to gather pertinent contact information, especially emails, in a central location.  If you have contact info of interested parties, please forward to me for database compilation.
*  SPREAD THE WORD!!!!     INVITE   E V E R Y O N E  ! ! !

NEWS and NOTES:
KNPR's State of Nevada- Eli Mizrachi, current owner of the Huntridge, and I will be appearing with Dave Berns on Monday March 10th's program during the 9:00am hour... please call in with your support, questions and insight.
Las Vegas Sun- Looking in on City Hall
http://lasvegassun.com/news/2008/mar/05/state-nances-may-stunt-effort-save-huntridge-theat/
Las Vegas Sun- Sun Editorial
http://lasvegassun.com/news/2008/mar/02/saving-past/
Las Vegas Sun- Joe Schoenemann's Breaking Story
http://lasvegassun.com/news/2008/feb/28/historic-huntridge-could-face-destruction/
www.SaveTheHuntridge.com- We are in-touch with a webmaster and bandwidth provider and are in the process of developing the page.  Please check back frequently and enjoy its development.
Classic Las Vegas- Blogged info:
http://classiclasvegas.squarespace.com/classic-las-vegas-blog/
http://classiclasvegas.squarespace.com/historic-site-of-the-week/2007/9/12/endangered-site-of-the-week.html
http://classiclasvegas.squarespace.com/classic-las-vegas-blog/2008/2/14/las-vegas-theaters-and-movies-i-remember.html
Very Vintage Vegas- Blogged info:
http://veryvintagevegas.com/
Lotta Living- Discussion Forum
http://www.lottaliving.com/bb/viewtopic.php?t=10491
Friends of the Huntridge- State Funding-- item 26
http://dmla.clan.lib.nv.us/DOCS/shpo/CCA/CCAProjects(2007-1993).htm
NRS Statute- Regarding Preservation
http://www.leg.state.nv.us/NRS/NRS-383.html
NRS Statute- Cultural Affairs
http://www.leg.state.nv.us/NRS/NRS-233C.html

Thanks everyone,
Looking forward to tonight and Saturday!!!

More Info on the History of the Huntridge Theater

I was reading the paperwork for the nomination of the Huntridge Theater to be designated a place on the National Registry of Historic Places.  It makes for interesting reading.  The nomination is dated Feb. 22nd, 1993.  You can read in its entirety here.

Reading, I was reminded of the circular driveway that used to be there in front of the theater.  I had long forgotten about it but the minute I read about it, I saw it clearly in mind as if it were yesterday.  I remember standing in lines that used to snake down to Charleston Blvd and then turn east for the blockbuster movies. 

I vividly remember the old Post Office, the Huntridge Station, that was next door (in what used to be Cima Mattress) but have no recollection of a bank.  The Restaurant Supply Store on the east side of the property used to be Oran Gragson Furniture.  I remember my mom shopping for furniture there when Oran Gragson was also the mayor.

As you approached, the ticket booth was to the right of the entrance, though I also vaguely recall it having its own ticket booth when I was quite young. But my memory may be playing tricks on me there.  Once in the lobby, the concession stand was to the right and the big doors leading into the auditorium were to the left.  The projection booth (and separate  cry room) were accessible by stairs via a door on the other side of the concession area.  The auditorium seated 1000 people (but since this report was filed, the interior has all been gutted). 

Also according to the nomination, the neon signage used to be in script.   The theater interior  had been halved sometime in the early 1980s but by the time that the Friends of the Huntridge had entered the picture, they had taken down the dividing wall and turned the auditorium back into a large facility.

The Original murals were painted over long ago as were the ones in the adjoining Post Office.

Despite those changes to the building, the nomination made the case for the building, noting that much of the architectural features that were part of the original building were still there. 

Of all the movie theaters of my youth, the Huntridge is the last one standing.  The El Portal was long ago refurbished (and the signage and marquee altered) into a gift shop and all the others have been torn down.  

The double-bill that opened the Huntridge on October 10th, 1944 were "Hellzapoppin" and "Hi, Neighbor".  There was a contest to name the movie stars and the winner received 10 free guest passes and a $25 War Bond.  The Huntridge Neighborhood, located behind the theater, provided many of the patrons.  

Lloyd and Edythe Katz were granted a 27-year lease on the theater in 1951Katz was a well-known Southern California theater promoter and he brought with him his numerous studio and star connections.  His widow, Edythe told me in a 2005 interview that Lloyd was quite a showman and he knew how to promote.  The Huntridge was soon the most popular theater in town.  The Katz's were also more liberal than the owner of the El Portal, former mayor Ernie Cragin.  The El Portal had a strict segregation policy.  The Huntridge, however, was much more open-minded and did not follow a strict policy.  In addition to the Huntridge, the Katz's also ran the Fremont Theater (next to the Fremont Hotel) and the Guild Theater both located downtown.  The Katz's ran the Huntridge until 1978 when it was purchased by local contractor Frank Silvaggio.  The Silvaggio's are a long-time Las Vegas family.

In 1947, Bud Abbott and Lou Costello appeared live on the stage of the Huntridge to promote their movie "Buck Privates Come Home".   Judy Garland, Jerry Lewis, Marlene Dietrich and Frank Sinatra all appeared in support of their movies that premiered there.  While the "Las Vegas Story" premiered at the Fremont Theater downtown, the crowd was so large that the film also premiered at the Huntridge with Katz "bicycling" the prints between the two theaters.

The theater is a combination of Streamline Moderne and International styles of architecture and the prominent exterior features are still there.   The nomination also notes that it is one of the few remaining Las Vegas cultural buildings still standing from the 1940s.

Today, the building is in poor condition and one would never guess of its history and its meaning to the long-timers who whiled many a Saturday afternoon there as children, ushers and parents.

We believe that is vital for everyone who loves Las Vegas history and loves the Huntridge to speak up in support of saving this community treasure.  Please leave your comments below.  I will be sure that they get heard. 

We will be discussing this topic at the Friends of Classic Las Vegas monthly meeting on March 9th.  Stay tuned. 

 

Huntridge Tops the List of Immediately Endangered Buildings

Well, there's been lots of talk all day in back circles about the big news:

The venerable Huntridge Theater, one of the movie theaters of not only my youth but all of us of a certain age, is in very real danger.

Emails are flying back and forth between preservation groups and everyone is waiting to see what the Las Vegas Sun reports in the morning.

Word on the street is that the owner of the Huntridge, Eli Mizrachi is going to approach the State Cultural Affairs Commission in March.  Seems that Mizrachi wants to pay back the money he got from the State for restoration of the Huntridge years ago.  In return, he is hoping to get permission TO TEAR DOWN the Huntridge.

On Friday the Cultural Affairs Commission discussed allowing current Huntridge owner Eli Mizrachi repay the state $1.5 million in grant money that was designated to renovate and restore the Huntridge into a top-notch performing venue. Mizrachi wants to cut the strings attached to the money. Right now he can't demolish the building or even alter it without prior approval from the State Historic Preservation Officer. And, its use has to be as a performing arts space. 

But if he gets permission from the Cultural Affairs Commission and Ron James, the State Historic Preservation Officer, to repay the money, then the road will be clear for Mizrachi to approach the City of Las Vegas Planning Commission  about razing the building and building something new there.

This will be a lightning rod issue for all the preservation groups.  The historic theater designed by renowned theater architect S. Charles Lee and originally owned, in part,  by Loretta Young and Irene Dunne has been a part of the Las Vegas landscape since the 1940s.

Frank Sinatra premiered his movie "Suddenly" there selling tickets from the box office to the adoring crowds.  It was the home of Disney animated features when I was younger.  It has been a theater, a night club and a performing arts venue.  There are people in town who very much want to see it returned to its former glory as a performing arts venue that provides not only for the community at large but for the near-by historic neighborhoods as well.

This one will likely create a firestorm of opinions.

So stay tuned.  We will update this story in the morning as soon as we have more information.

In the meantime, here's two previous articles on the history of the Huntridge:

http://classiclasvegas.squarespace.com/classic-las-vegas-blog/2008/2/14/las-vegas-theaters-and-movies-i-remember.html

 

http://classiclasvegas.squarespace.com/historic-site-of-the-week/2007/9/12/endangered-site-of-the-week.html 

 

huntridge.jpg 

 

Huntridge%20from%20left%20side.jpg 

 

Huntridge%20from%20under%20marquee.jpg 

 

Special Thanks to RoadsidePictures for allowing us to use this image. 

Also blogging about this issue is the crew from VeryVintageVegas.com