Fox Theater - Detroit Michigan

 
Home
Amusement Parks - 32
Drag Strips - 14
Drive-In Theaters - 160
Hotels - 12
Indoor Theaters - 1225
Motels - 452
Motor Speedways - 189
Last 30 Updates
Forum/Message Board
Search Or Select Location Type  
 General Info
 Home
 Latest Info Updates
 Advanced Search
 Image Search
 Site Statistics
 Forum
 About Us
 Advertise Here
 Support This Site
 Update Archive
 Contact Us
 Join Mailing List
 Press Clippings
 Guest Book
 Submit New Info
 Submit Pictures
 Poll Results
 Columns
 Ron's Michigan Memories
 Resources
 News
 Links
 Link Exchange
 Books
 Videos
 Lost Web Sites
 Wallpaper
 Scenic Shots
 Multimedia
 Video Clips
 Audio Clips
 Drive-In Theaters
 Drive-In History
 Open Drive-In's
 Latest Drive-In Pics
 Drive-In Topo Links
 Drive-In's by County
 MichiganDriveIns.com
 Digital Restorations
 Drive-In Forum
 Indoor Theaters
 Links, Showtimes, News
 Theaters by County
 Classic Moviehouse Open
 Movie Palaces
 Latest Indoor Theater Pics
 Lost Theaters
 Old Theater Ads
 Closures/Demos
 Parks and Fairs
 Amusement Parks
 Latest Amusement Park Pics
 Fairs
 Fun Parks
 Auto Racing
 John G's Dragstrip Memories
 Dragstrips
 Motor Speedways
 Latest Speedway Pics
 Cars and Drivers
 Boat Racing
 Hydroplane Racing
 Gas, Food and Lodging
 Restaurants
 Gas Stations
 Motels
 Tourist Cabins
 Hotels
 Cities and Towns
 Schools **New**
 Vintage Detroit
 Aerial Views
 Ghost Towns
 Train Depots
 Post Offices
 Downtown Views
 Old Towns
 Airports
 Ballrooms
 Interesting Architecture
 Retail
 Old Line Stores **New**
 Shopping Centers
 Car Dealers
 Venues
 Landmarks
 Industrial
 Military
 Recreation and Sports
 Lakes
 Lighthouses
 Campgrounds
 Beaches
 Resorts
 Ski Resorts
 Bowling Alleys
 Roadside Michigan
 Michigan Promos
 Tourist Traps
 Vintage Signs
 Googie Architecture
 Random Ruins
 Fox Theater 

Name: Fox Theater   Street: 2211 Woodward Ave

City: Detroit    State: MI    Zip:      Phone: (313) 983-6611
Mapquest Google Maps Live Search
County: Wayne Operator: Illitch Enterprises
Open: 1928 Closed: N/A Capacity: 5048 Status: Open
Web Address: N/A
Architect: C Howard Crane
Number of visits to this page since February 23, 2007: 9746

Click here to show pictures only

  
User Rating:Rate this location: 1 2 3 4 5 - Best
 

Entry Date: 3/3/2004 - Joan (Lake) Ross: I lived on the lower East Side on Coplin near Vernor Hwy. Across the street was a family by the name of Herbert. Mr. Frank Herbert had a very large family and St. Vincent DePaul Society obtained the job of Custodian for him I think in the 30s. His oldest son Vincent became head usher and another brother, Leonard, also worked as an usher when he got old enough. When we could afford the high price of 25 cents for the show and 20 cents for the streetcars, we went to the Fox as often as possible.

Our neighborhood show was the Cinderella. My mother would give my sister and me 25 cents to split between us - 10 cents each to get into the show and 5 cents to be spent on candy in the store adjoining the show. For the extra penny we would buy 2 squirrels (candy) . When the war came we had to pay 11 cents to get into the show because a tax of 1 cent had been added to the price. Then we only had 3 cents for candy. Those were the
good old days. Now look what goes on at the Fox! Im glad it survived.
Entry Date: 2/17/2003 - Detroit News: 


Some facts on the Fox:




* It took 18 months to build this theater, costing an estimated $12 million. The original staff numbered over four hundred, including ushers, set designers, matrons and doormen.




* The Fox Theater was the first in the world to be constructed with built-in equipment for talking movies. Under the Fox Movietone patents, a highly sensitive photo-electric cell converted sound waves into light waves back into sound that was amplified and passed by cable to the stage.





* A childrens dancing school was started in 1931. More than 14,000 youngsters attended classes.




* It was in 1937 that Detroit News reporter Rex Grover featured the Foxs Gae Foster Girls -- a chorus group that performed between movies -- in a pictorial special that ran in the weekend Roto magazine. His account of their backstage life implied that they sat around reading confession magazines, passing their time with idle gossip. The chorus girls were so incensed that they wrote a letter to the editor of The Detroit News challenging the reporter to find six girls from Detroit -- no Phi Beta Kappas -- to compete against six from their group in an intelligence contest.




* In keeping with the spirit of Memorial Day, The Fox Theater began observing "Americanism Week" in 1939. All Detroiters having obtained their final American citizenship papers since May 1 of that year, were guests of the theater during the showing of "Only Angels Have Wings." The presentation of their citizenship papers plus the required Federal admission tax allowed them entrance.




* Weekend attendance records at the Fox Theater were toppled by Kay Kyser and his College of Musical Knowledge in March 1939. More than 61,000 persons jammed the house over three days, surpassing previous attendance records set by Benny Goodman, Tony Martin and other favorites of the time.




* For the showing of the screen musical, "The Boys From Syracuse," which depicted the hilarious mistaken identity problems of twins, the Fox sponsored a twins contest. All twins attending the weekday performances were given free admission along with a souvenir photograph of themselves. Cash prizes were awarded to the most perfect set of twins.




* On Feb. 19, 1943, the first "war-worker dawn show" had more than 9,000 war plant workers from the night shift attending its 2 a.m. show. Workers were encouraged to "come as you are" and enjoy some much needed entertainment.




Various owners kept the Fox open and profitable through the 1940s with such acts as Benny Goodman, Sarah Vaughn, Louis Armstrong, Kate Smith and Jack Benny packing the seats. The Fox grossed $75,000 a week during World War II, offering a steady stream of newsreels and movies to audiences hungry for war information and diversion.




Berry Gordys Motown Revue began a Christmas tradition in the early 60s. The Fox was packed for ten days from Christmas to New Years with four or five shows daily featuring home-grown talent like the Temptations, the Supremes and Smokey Robinson.
Entry Date: 2/17/2003 - Detroit News: By Laurie J. Marzejka / The Detroit News





When the opening-night curtain rose at Detroits Fox Theatre on Sept. 21, 1928, an audience of 5,000 invited guests came to 2211 Woodward Avenue to see what had been billed as a "Temple of Amusement." The did not go home disappointed.




The Theater, an awe-inspiring combination of Far Eastern, Indian and Egyptian styles, was the second largest Theater in the world. But it surpassed all others in grandeur.





The lobby of this mammoth 10-story structure, which was six stories high and half a block long, was surrounded by blood-red marble columns. Each column held its own jeweled figure representing various Asiatic Gods.





The decorative scheme used subdued tones of gold to contrast a riot of color. Hangings in the lobby were in golden damask and stage draperies combined regal-red velour and damask which were set off by a festooned drapery with a wide silken fringe.




Guests were greeted by notes from a small Moller organ situated over the entrance.




The 3,600-square-foot lobby was covered by the largest wool rug ever made by an American manufacturer. Weighing approximately 3,000 pounds, this carpet reached to the foot of the lobbys grand stairway that led to the mezzanine and balcony levels. There was also an escalator and large passenger elevators --- the only theater in Michigan so equipped.




The auditorium was 175 feet wide and 110 feet high. Large colonnades flanked the auditorium and behind these was a promenade where the patrons could stroll and view the entire theater. A tier of seats in the rear of the balcony were designated as smoking loges and equipped with special fans to carry away the smoke.




The main ceiling of the auditorium was designed as a huge canopy, with sky lights above it, and decorated in the style of the durbars of India.




One innovation in movie theater construction was the inclusion of three-foot aisles in front of every row of seats. This allowed for the passage of patrons without making it necessary for those seated to stand.




The orchestra pit was built on a platform that could be raised and lowered by pneumatic pumps. Similar platforms built into the stage allowed for unusual effects. The theater was equipped with loudspeakers that would provide a uniform tonal quality throughout the entire theater.




The inaugural performance at the Fox opened with the playing of "The Star Spangled Banner" by the 60-musician-strong Fox Theater Grand Orchestra as they rose dramatically into view on the elevator platform.




On stage the inaugural production, "The Evolution of Transportation," depicted the progress of Detroit from Indian days to the present utilizing a troupe of 32 dancing girls called Tillerettes and a choir of 50 voices.




This performance was followed by the showing of a Fox Movietone news reel---with sound. The feature film was "Street Angel," starring Charles Farrell and Janet Gaynor.




The Fox Theater was designed by architect Charles Howard Crane, a Detroiter who had once worked for Albert Kahn. Crane was also responsible for Orchestra Hall (1919), the Capitol on Broadway (1922) and the State on Woodward (1925). Crane designed the United Artists Theater on Adams as well as 250 movie houses across Canada and the United States.





Credit for the magnificent interior of the Fox Theater belongs to Eve Leo, wife of pioneer film producer William Fox. Fox was founder of the company which still bears his name today -- Twentieth Century-Fox




Fox, son of Hungarian immigrant parents, had a rags-to-riches-to-rags career. Turned down around the turn of the century for a $3 raise from his $17-a-week job as a pants presser on New Yorks East Side, Fox took his savings and bought a down-at-the-heels Brooklyn nickelodeon. At the height of the post-war boom 25 years later he was the ruler of a cinema kingdom which included Detroits Fox Theater.




One of the biggest deals ever transacted in show business was his acquisition of the 255 theaters of the West Coast Theaters Circuit, appraised at $100 million. He later added to his string the famous Roxy Theater in New York. He controlled corporations estimated to be worth $165 million and at the pinnacle of his career he was said to have carried $6.4 million in life insurance -- more than any other man in the world at the time.




A few months after the stock market crash of 1929, he lost controlling interest in the Fox Films Corp. and the Fox Theaters Corp. and resigned his leadership positions at both firms. He continued on as chairman of the companies advisory board but a welter of stockholders lawsuits and government tax judgments drove him to voluntary bankruptcy in Atlantic City, N.J., in 1936.




Detroits Fox theater changed hands several times before Mike and Marion Ilitch of Little Caesars Pizza closed a deal in 1987 for the purchase of the theater and connecting office building. A multi-million dollar restoration project, which included a new 10-story marquee, culminated in a grand reopening Nov. 19, 1988, when the curtain once again rose at the theater known as the "Temple of Amusement."
Entry Date: 1/6/2003 - Cinema Treasures: The Fox Theatre seats over 5,000 people and is Detroits largest movie palace. In 1988, the Fox underwent an $8.1-million restoration. Since the restoration, the Fox has become one of the most successful theaters in the country combining broadway shows, concerts, special events and the occassional classic film.

Fox Theater FALL 2006 FROM RON GROSS
FALL 2006 FROM RON GROSS
Fox Theater FALL 2006 FROM RON GROSS
FALL 2006 FROM RON GROSS
Fox Theater OLD SHOT FROM WAYNE STATE LIBRARY
OLD SHOT FROM WAYNE STATE LIBRARY
Fox Theater MARQUEE
MARQUEE
Fox Theater WINTER 2004
WINTER 2004
Fox Theater GREAT OLD PIC
GREAT OLD PIC
Fox Theater 1947 MARQUEE SHOT
1947 MARQUEE SHOT
Fox Theater 1956 MARQUEE.SHOT
1956 MARQUEE.SHOT
Fox Theater FOX INNER FOYER 1928 FROM JOHN LAUTER
FOX INNER FOYER 1928 FROM JOHN LAUTER
Fox Theater FOX LOBBY STAIRCASE 1928 FROM JOH LAUTER
FOX LOBBY STAIRCASE 1928 FROM JOH LAUTER
Fox Theater FOX MENS SMOKING LOUNGE 1928 FROM JOH LAUTER
FOX MENS SMOKING LOUNGE 1928 FROM JOH LAUTER
Fox Theater FOX PLAN VIEW FROM JOHN LAUTER
FOX PLAN VIEW FROM JOHN LAUTER
Fox Theater FOX PLAN VIEW FROM JOHN LAUTER
FOX PLAN VIEW FROM JOHN LAUTER
Fox Theater SUMMER 2003
SUMMER 2003
Fox Theater PROBABLY FROM 70S
PROBABLY FROM 70S
Fox Theater OLD PIC
OLD PIC
Fox Theater AUDITORIUM
AUDITORIUM
Fox Theater AUDITORIUM
AUDITORIUM
Fox Theater AUDITORIUM
AUDITORIUM
Fox Theater OLD INTERIOR PHOTO
OLD INTERIOR PHOTO
Fox Theater OLD INTERIOR PHOTO
OLD INTERIOR PHOTO
Fox Theater GREAT MARQUEE SHOT
GREAT MARQUEE SHOT
Fox Theater FROM ROBERT MORROW
FROM ROBERT MORROW
Fox Theater OLD AD
OLD AD
© 2001-2010 Water Winter Wonderland. All rights reserved.  Over   Served  Page Rank
Web Design and Graphics by Michigan Data Systems