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Victoria Theater (Hammerstein's)

Victoria Theatre
Hammerstein's
Hammerstein's Victoria.jpg
Hammerstein’s
Address 42nd Street and Seventh Avenue
New York City
United States
Owner Oscar Hammerstein I
Operator Oscar and William Hammerstein
Type Broadway, Vaudeville
Construction
Opened 1899
Demolished 1915
Architect John B. McElfatrick

The Victoria Theatre (1899 – 1915) was a prominent American vaudeville house during the early years of the twentieth century. Theatre mogul, Oscar Hammerstein I, opened it in 1899 on the northwest corner of Seventh Avenue and 42nd Street, along New York City’s Longacre Square (now Times Square). The theatre was closely associated with the Paradise Roof Garden above it, and the two venues came to be known collectively as Hammerstein’s.

Undaunted by the failure of his massive Olympia Theatre, Hammerstein quickly secured the necessary funds to build the Victoria, purportedly named so in honor of his victory over his enemies. Due to budgetary constraints, the building crew was forced to take several cost-saving measures: the walls were filled with debris from the site’s demolished structure, Gilley Moore’s Market Stables; once erected, the plastered walls remained largely unadorned; and second-hand theatre seats lined the rows of the house. Despite the shortcuts, the press warmly greeted the grand opening; The New York Times deemed the décor “warm and comfortable,” free of anything “grotesque.”

A three-act burletta titled The Reign of Error, featuring the comedy duo of the Rogers Brothers, christened the new stage and ran for at least fifty performances. In the four years that followed, Hammerstein presented ten other productions, one of which, a flop titled Sweet Music, was rumored to be of his own authorship. Not one of these productions, however, was successful enough to solidify a formidable reputation for the fledgling theatre.

In 1904, Hammerstein took the drastic measure of turning the Victoria from legitimate theatre to vaudeville, and over the succeeding years, his risk proved tremendously profitable. Headliners at the Victoria included such names as the Three Keatons, the Four Cohans, and the Seven Little Foys. In printed advertisements, the term “direct from Hammerstein’s” was testament to the quality of an act.


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