Insider’s History of The Hollywood Palace
Thanks to ABC Hollywood veteran Don McCroskey, here’s a look behind the curtain of a place many of us remember as The Hollywood Palace.
ABC started doing shows from what was then called the El Capitan theater in the fall of 1957 using equipment installed by NBC in 1950 to do musical-variety shows such as Martin & Lewis. The Frank Sinatra and Guy Mitchell shows were done from there for only one season. In the Summer of 1963, the theater was reactivated with an RCA TS-40 video switcher and an RCA (Hollywood built) audio console.
The Jerry Lewis show was expensively produced but a failure after only 12 shows. It was replaced by the Hollywood Palace show (and the name of the theater changed) which ran from January 4, 1964 thru February 7, 1970. The King Family show ran January 23, 1965 thru January 8, 1966. The above picture was probably taken sometime before the summer of 1965 since the barber shop was bought out to make room for the TK-41-C color camera and Ampex color video tape installation. All shows from the Palace were in color from September, 1965 on. Lawrence Welk did shows from the Palace until PC-60 color cameras were installed in Stage E in the Fall of 1966.
When I started in 1972, I did utility on the Merv Griffin Show that was shot here also. As a tape operator, I worked there along with Nick Giradano who was the lead tape editor using two AMPEX VR-2000 2 inch machines. It was a fun show to work and I learned a lot from Nick. Later the tape machines were removed and the show was taped at the Prospect Lot via TELCO lines.
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