Deep Inside The Ed Sullivan Theater, Part 2

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Deep Inside The Ed Sullivan Theater, Part 2

The 13-story, brown brick and terra cotta office building with a ground-floor theater was built by Arthur Hammerstein between 1925 and 1927, and was named Hammerstein’s Theater after his father, Oscar Hammerstein I. The theater auditorium had a number of beautiful stain glass windows that were removed for safe keeping when the Letterman renovation was done.

Below left you can see part of one of a dozen or so wooden crates that these windows are safely packed in. The NYC Historical Commission requires that they be safeguarded and stored on site.

In the center we see the “elephant columns”. At some point in the 1950s, Sullivan took interest in an elephant act touring with Ringling Brothers and wanted them on the show. Before they arrived, some calculations were made and it was determined that they were too heavy for the stage without some extra support, so, these two columns were added under center stage. Today, this space is the Green Room for visiting bands that close the show.

Behind the doors on the right is where the Studio 50 control room used to be. This photo was taken from the lobby entrance near the box office. To the left is the interior theater lobby and directly behind me is the arrival lobby and the main entrance doors on Broadway. This space is now part of the auditorium again and the control room is in the basement with all the other production and technical elements of the show. More soon!



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