The Tremont Theatre (est. 1889) was a playhouse in Boston , Massachusetts , in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Henry E. Abbey and John B. Schoeffel [1] established the enterprise[2] and oversaw construction of its building[3] at no.176 Tremont Street in the Boston Theater District area.[4] Managers included Abbey, Schoeffel and Grau ,[5] [6] Klaw & Erlanger ,[7] Thos. B. Lothan and Albert M. Sheehan.[8]
Tremont Theatre, Boston, c. 1910s
1918 cover art from Tremont Theatre
A traveller's guidebook described the space in 1899: "The auditorium is 75 feet high of the same width and 80 feet deep. It is fashioned on the plan of a mammoth shell. ... The ten oddly fashioned private boxes on either side of the proscenium give a novel effect to the interior. The decoration of the main ceiling is modernized Renaissance treated in Gobelin tapestry effect and the coloring of the walls is in harmonizing shades. The stage is 73 by 45 feet, with a height of 69 feet to the rigging loft. The house has 2,000 seats."[9]
"In 1947 the Tremont became a movie theater named the Astor and briefly, before its demise, a juice bar."[10] "After a fire in 1983, the building was demolished."[11] "AMC Boston Common 19 Movie Theater now occupies the site."[10]
1880s–1890s
Justin McCarthy 's "The Candidate," with Charles Wyndham and Mary Moore[12]
Sarah Bernhardt [13]
1492 Up to Date , presented by Edward E. Rice 's "Surprise party"
Pauline Hall 's "Puritania," music by Edgar Stillman Kelley [14] [15]
"Niobe," with Abbott & Teal's comedy co.[5]
Garrett P. Serviss ' "Wonders of America"[5]
W.S. Gilbert's "His Excellency ," with George Edwardes ' Comic Opera Co.[16]
"Two Little Vagrants"[17]
J.M. Barrie 's "The Professors Love Story," with E.S. Willard [18]
"Half a King," with Francis Wilson[18]
Augustus Thomas ' "The Hoosier Doctor," with Digby Bell [19]
Augustus Thomas' "The Jucklins," with Stuart Robson [19]
DeWolf Hopper and the Boston Cadet Band[20]
De Koven and Smith's "The Highwayman," with Broadway Theatre Opera Co.[20]
1930s-1940s
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Advertisement for "the cool Tremont," 1902
Tremont Street, 1903, across from Boston Common. (Tremont Theatre 6th building from right)
Portrait of John B. Schoeffel, one of the proprietors
Performance of "The Stolen Story" at the Tremont Theatre, c. 1906
Programme from "The Student King," 1906
Detail of 1911 map of Boston, showing Tremont Theatre
John B. Schoeffel (1846–1918); married to actress Agnes Booth . "John B. Schoeffel Dies in Boston at 72; veteran manager once directed Metropolitan Opera House with H.E. Abbey and Maurice Grau." New York Times, September 1, 1918
"Abbey, Henry Eugene". Lamb's biographical dictionary of the United States . Boston: James H. Lamb Company. 1900.
Atherton Brownell. Boston Theatres of To-Day. The Bostonian, v.2, no.6, 1896
Boston Almanac, 1891, 1894; Boston Register and Business Directory, 1918, 1921
Boston Globe, January 22, 1893
"Death of Maurice Grau". The Theatre . 7 (75). May 1907.
New York Times, May 14, 1914
Rand, McNally & Co.'s handy guide to Boston and environs ... , Chicago: Rand, McNally & Co., 1899, OCLC 33412586 , OL 529088M
Boston Daily Globe, October 20, 1889
New York Times, March 10, 1891
Boston Globe, August 21, 1892
Music (magazine), v.3 , Jan. 1893
Boston Evening Transcript, March 12, 1896
Boston Globe, March 26, 1897
Boston Evening Transcript, December 17, 1897
Boston Globe, April 8, 1898
Boston Evening Transcript, May 14, 1898
Boston Globe, September 19, 1902
Boston Daily Globe, January 5, 1903
Boston Evening Transcript, December 31, 1903
Boston Evening Transcript, December 31, 1903
Boston Daily Globe, March 28, 1905
The Theatre (magazine), July 1906
Boston Evening Transcript – October 25, 1906
Boston Evening Transcript, April 17, 1908
Boston Globe, January 5, 1915
Boston Evening Transcript – June 3, 1915
Paul Polgar (2008). "Fighting Lightning with Fire: Black Boston's Battle against "The Birth of a Nation." ". Massachusetts Historical Review . 10 .
Boston Globe, May 22, 1917
Boston Globe, February 10, 1920
This Week in Boston, September 5, 1920
Boston Globe, December 12, 1922