Mayfair Music Hall

Mayfair Music Hall
Location of Mayfair Music Hall in the Los Angeles metropolitan area
Coordinates 34°0′54″N 118°29′47″W / 34.01500°N 118.49639°W / 34.01500; -118.49639Coordinates: 34°0′54″N 118°29′47″W / 34.01500°N 118.49639°W / 34.01500; -118.49639
Built 1911[1]
Architect Henry C. Hollwedel
Official name: Mayfair Theatre
Designated 11 July 1994[1]

The Mayfair Music Hall was an English music hall-styled vaudeville theater devised and created by entrepreneur Milt Larsen, located in Santa Monica, California.

This theater was designed by architect Henry C. Hollwedel, and built in 1913 as the Santa Monica Opera House. Shortly afterward, it was renamed the Majestic Theater and featured silent movies and split week vaudeville acts.

The theater was remodeled after sound was introduced in the late twenties.

The theater was rather plain and was modernized during the sixties.

Milt Larsen, John Shrum and Thomas Heric transformed the venue into a Victorian music hall in 1972 and produced British variety shows there for 8 years. The ornate boxes and staff work were rescued from the grand old Belmont Theater, a major movie palace adjacent to the famed Bimini Baths at 1st and Vermont in Los Angeles.

Entrepreneur Larsen's full traditional music hall productions featured noted actors and performers, such as Bernard Fox, Beatrice Kay, Larry "Seymour" Vincent, Mousie Garner, Ian Whitcomb, Eubie Blake, Gene Bell, English entertainer Joyce Howard, and other actors and musical stars of the day.

In later years it later became the home for Chicago's Second City Television and The A-List.

In 1974, the theater was used to film the famous "Puttin' on the Ritz" sequence in Young Frankenstein. The building is also a prominent setting in Henry Jaglom's 1987 film Someone to Love, rather presciently as a forlorn theater on the verge of being torn down to make way for a shopping center.

The theatre was damaged in the 1994 Northridge earthquake, and the owner gutted the building and removed all the ornate decor. The building was demolished in 2010.

References

  1. 1 2 "City of Santa Monica Designated Landmarks" (PDF). City of Santa Monica. Retrieved 2013-02-27.
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