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Madison Square Theatre

The Madison Square Theatre was a Broadway theatre in Manhattan, on the south side of 24th Street between Sixth Avenue and Broadway (which intersects Fifth Avenue near that point.) It was built in 1863, operated as a theater from 1865 to 1908, and demolished in 1908 to make way for an office building. The Madison Square Theatre was the scene of important developments in stage technology, theatre design, and theatrical tour management. For about half its history it had other names including the Fifth Avenue Theatre, Daly's Fifth Avenue Theatre, Hoyt's Madison Square Theatre, and Hoyt's Theatre.

Madison Square Theatre
Daly’s, Daly’s Fifth Avenue Theatre, Fifth Avenue Hall, Fifth Avenue Opera House, Fifth Avenue Theatre, Hoyt’s Madison Square Theatre, Hoyt’s, Minnie Cumming’s Drawing-Room Theatre
AddressBroadway and W. 24th St.
New York, NY
Coordinates40°44′32″N 73°59′24″W / 40.7422°N 73.9901°W / 40.7422; -73.9901
OwnerA.R. Eno (land), various (building)
OperatorGeorge Christy, John Brougham, James Fisk Jr., Augustin Daly, Steele MacKaye, Mallory Bros., A.M. Palmer, Charles H. Hoyt, Frank McKee, Walter N. Lawrence
TypeBroadway
Capacity900, +100 standees
Construction
Opened1865
Closed1908
Reopened1877
Demolished1908
Rebuilt1868, 1877, 1879-80
Years active1865-1873, 1877-1908
ArchitectVarious/unknown

History Edit

Merchant and real estate magnate Amos R. Eno leased land next to his Fifth Avenue Hotel in 1862[1] to James Fisk Jr., who built an after-hours gold trading exchange during the U.S. Civil War. The “regular stock exchange” found the competition disruptive and soon shut down the operation.[2] The building became a performance space, the Fifth Avenue Opera House, used by George Christy and other minstrel shows from 1865 to 1867 when C.H. Garland took it over as the Fifth Avenue Theatre for burlesque shows. The theatre closed at the beginning of 1868 after one minstrel show manager murdered another after attending a performance. John Brougham briefly managed it as Brougham's Theatre in 1869, followed by building owner Fisk, who restored the Fifth Avenue name and presented French opéra bouffe.[3]

Augustin Daly became manager later in 1869, sometimes calling it the Fifth Avenue Theatre, sometimes Daly's Fifth Avenue or simply Daly's Theatre. The house (seating area) during this period was described as being “plated with mirrors for the illusion of immensity,” with a palette of “blush rose, neatly framed in white, with delicate boundaries of gold.” Capacity was 900, or 1,000 with standees, and gas jets provided interior lighting.[2] When the theatre burned to the ground after a matinee on New Year's Day 1873, Daly moved his company and the Fifth Avenue Theatre name to an existing theatre on 28th and Broadway.[4] The name similarities continue to cause confusion today. It was four years until a new building appeared, first called the Fifth Avenue Hall, where a magician named Heller performed for several months in 1877, then Minnie Cumming's Drawing Room Theatre.

George and Marshall Mallory then erected yet another building on the site, for actor-director-playwright Steele Mackaye who had produced a few shows in the small hall in 1879 under a name they kept, the Madison Square Theatre. Mackaye's famous stage technology improvements included the "double stage", an elevator the size of the full stage that was raised and lowered by counter-weights and reduced scene changes to one or two minutes from five or more. The double stage required the builders to excavate an extra-deep foundation.[5] Ventilation featured a primitive form of air conditioning, with cool air drawn in from the roof and circulated to perforations under the seats. To increase stage-room for action and house-room for seats, the orchestra was in a balcony above the stage, and the conductor received "cues by means of electric signals and reflectors." Interior decoration was meant to evoke an intimate drawing-room, with imitation-mahogany trim, gold and pale colors, Shakespeare illustrations,[6] and a Tiffany-designed drop curtain that burned in an otherwise uneventful fire a few weeks after the reopening.[7]

The Mallory brothers and Mackaye soon fell out, and Mackaye lost the rights to his single commercially successful play, Hazel Kirke, and his position at the theatre. By then Business Manager Daniel Frohman had hired his brothers Gustave and Charles. They used Hazel Kirke's long run to implement the nation's first theatrical touring organization with multiple companies of a single play and developed their promotional and management skills.[8] The Frohmans, along with Marcus Klaw and Abraham Lincoln Erlanger, who met while working in the Madison Square Theatre's publicity department,[9] and David Belasco, who also worked at the theatre in this period, became major forces in American theatrical management over the next 35 years.

The Rev. Dr. George Mallory, owner (with his brother) and editor of the Episcopal Church publication The Churchman, sought to use their ownership of the theatre "to elevate the moral tone of the American stage", among other things by running only American-written plays cast almost exclusively with American actors.[10] The Mallorys managed the theatre on this principal themselves for four years. In 1885 they brought in impresario A.M. Palmer who bought them out and managed until 1891, with a more conventionally international mix of plays. Palmer was followed by playwright/director Charles H. Hoyt, along with Charles Thompson who died in 1893 and Frank McKee, who ran the theatre after Hoyt became incapacitated in 1898. During this time the theatre was variously known as Hoyt's Madison Square Theatre, or simply Hoyt's Theatre.

The Madison Square Theatre name returned in 1898, and remained through the management of Walter N. Lawrence until Eno's descendants demolished the building and the Fifth Avenue Hotel in 1908.[11] By that time the "Theater District" had moved uptown to the Times Square area around 42nd Street.

Productions Edit

In its forty years of operation some 250 plays were produced at the Madison Square Theatre. Following are productions that ran at least six weeks, noting runs of 100 or more performances.[12][13][14][15][16]

Daly Era (1869-1873)

Mackaye and Mallory Eras (1879-1885)

Palmer Era (1885-1891)

  • Saints and Sinners, Henry Arthur Jones, 1885. 111 performances.
  • Prince Karl, A.C. Gunter, 1886. 126 performances.
  • Held by the Enemy, William Gillette, 1886.
  • Jim the Penman, Sir Charles L. Young, 1886. 176 performances.
  • Captain Swift, Dion Boucicault, adaptation of Charles Haddon Chambers' work, 1888. 162 performances.
  • Aunt Jack, Ralph R. Lumley, 1889. 200 performances.
  • Beau Brummell, Clyde Fitch, 1890. 156 performances.
  • The Pharisee, Malcolm Watson, 1891.
  • Dinner at Eight, J.A. Ritchie, 1891.

Hoyt-McKee-Lawrence Era (1894-1908)

  • A Trip to Chinatown, book and lyrics by Charles H. Hoyt, music by Percy Gaunt, 1891. 657 performances – a record for New York theatre that held until 1919 (Irene).
  • A Temperance Town, Charles H. Hoyt, 1893. 125 performances.
  • A Milk White Flag: And Its Battle Scarred Followers on the Field of Mars and in the Court of Venus, Charles H. Hoyt, 1894. 153 performances.
  • The Foundling, William Lestocq, E. M. Robson, 1895. 104 performances.
  • The Man Upstairs, Augustus Thomas, 1895.
  • The Gay Parisians, Georges Feydeau, Maurice Desvallières, 1895. 120 performances.
  • A Black Sheep and How it Came to Washington, book by Charles H. Hoyt, music by Richard Stahl, Charles H. Hoyt, William Devere, Otis Harlan, Mr. Conor, and Mr. Kelly, 1896. 144 performances.
  • A Florida Enchantment, A. C. Gunter, 1896.
  • A Contented Woman, Charles H. Hoyt, 1897.
  • The Man from Mexico, Alexandre Bisson, Edmond Gondinet and H.A. Du Souchet, 1897.
  • Oh, Susannah!, 1898.
  • Dangerfield '95, Mildred Dowling, 1898.
  • On and Off, Alexandre Bisson, 1898.
  • Because She Loved Him So, William Gillette, 1899. 144 performances.
  • Why Smith Left Home, George Broadhurst, 1899.
  • Wheels Within Wheels, R.C. Carton, 1899.
  • Coralie and Company, Dressmakers, Albin Vallabreque, Maurice Hennequin, 1900.
  • Hodge, Podge & Co., adapted from the German by George V. Hobart, lyrics by Walter Ford, music by John W. Bratton and Harry Pleon, 1900.
  • On the Quiet, Augustus Thomas, 1901. 160 performances.
  • The Liberty Belles, book and lyrics by Harry B. Smith, 1901. 104 performances.
  • Sweet and Twenty, Basil Hood, 1901.
  • The Diplomat, Martha Morton, 1902.
  • The Two Schools, Alfred Capus, 1902.
  • The Secret of Polichinelle, Pierre Wolff, 1904. 124 performances.
  • Mrs. Temple's Telegram (known on the road as Who's Brown), Frank Wyatt, 1905.
  • The Prince Chap, Edward Peple, 1905. 106 performances.
  • The Man on the Box, Grace Livingston Furniss from Harold McGrath's novel, 1905. 111 performances.
  • David Garrick, Charles J. Bell, 1905.
  • The Three of Us, Rachel Crothers, 1906. 227 performances.

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ Brown, History of the New York Stage v2, p. 399.
  2. ^ a b "Another Disaster.: Total Destruction of the Fifth-Avenue Theatre by Fire," The New York Times, Jan. 2, 1873, p. 1.
  3. ^ Brown, History of the New York Stage v2, p. 400.
  4. ^ Brown, History of the New York Stage v2, p. 404-414.
  5. ^ "The Madison-Square to Go," The New York Times, Jul. 18, 1888, p. 1.
  6. ^ "The Madison-Square Theatre.: Mr. Mackaye's Improvements In The Stage Mechanism," The New York Times, Feb. 1, 1880, p. 5.
  7. ^ "Fire In A Theatre.: The Handsome Act-Drop Of The Madison Square Theatre Destroyed," The New York Times, Feb. 27, 1880, p. 5.
  8. ^ Searles, "Six Books: Frohman", The Bookman, Nov. 1916, p. 306.
  9. ^ Theatre Magazine, June 1922, p. 356.
  10. ^ "Rev. G.S. Mallory's Death: ...Madison Square Theatre--Wholesome Plays Only Presented," The New York Times, Mar. 3, 1897, p. 1.
  11. ^ The Passing of the Madison Square Theatre, Theatre Magazine (February 1908), pp. 42-46, viii
  12. ^ Brown, History of the New York Stage, v2, pp. 399-447
  13. ^ Chapman and Sherwood, The Best Plays of 1894-1899, pp. 83-260.
  14. ^ Mantle and Sherwood, The Best Plays of 1899-1909, pp. 346-584.
  15. ^ "Madison Square Theatre", ibdb.com.
  16. ^ Numbers of performances are as reported, or, where not reported (generally before 1894), are approximated based on information reported and the Mantle/Chapman/Sherwood assumption of eight performances per week during this general time period.
  17. ^ Weldon B. Durham (1986). American Theatre Companies, 1749-1887. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 326.

Bibliography Edit

  • Brown, Thomas Allston, A History of the New York Stage from the First Performance in 1732 to 1901, Volume 2, (New York: Dodd, Mead and Company), 1903.
  • Chapman, John, and Garrison P. Sherwood, eds., The Best Plays of 1894-1899, (New York: Dodd, Mead, & Company), 1955.
  • "Heard on Broadway", Theatre Magazine, V 35 No 255, June 1922, p. 356.
  • "Madison Square Theatre", Internet Broadway Database, www.ibdb.com.
  • Mantle, Burns, and Garrison P. Sherwood, eds., The Best Plays of 1899-1909, (Philadelphia: The Blakiston Company), 1944.
  • Searles, Stanhope, "Six Books of the Month: Charles Frohman, Manager and Man," The Bookman, v44 n3, Nov. 1916, p. 306.
  • "Another Disaster.: Total Destruction of the Fifth-Avenue Theatre by Fire. The Building Fortunately Empty at the Time, Rapid and Fierce Progress of the Flames, Exciting Scenes in the Lobbies of the Adjoining Hotels, Heroic and Successful Efforts of the Firemen," The New York Times, Jan. 2, 1873, p. 1.
  • "The Madison-Square Theatre.: Mr. Mackaye's Improvements In The Stage Mechanism," The New York Times, Feb. 1, 1880, p. 5.
  • "The Madison-Square to Go: Mr. Eno Will Tear the Theatre Down. After the Lease Expires An Extension to the Fifth Avenue Hotel Will be Erected on the Site," The New York Times, July 18, 1888, p. 1. (Eno changed his mind shortly after this article was published and did not tear down the theatre.)
  • "Rev. G.S. Mallory's Death: He Was a Noted Man Whose Career Was an Eventful, Interesting, and Influential One, Invested Money in Dramas. The Mallory Family Built the Madison Square Theatre and Sent Out "Hazel Kirke" Companies—Wholesome Plays Only Presented," The New York Times, Mar. 3, 1897, p. 1.
  • "Charles H. Hoyt Is Dead: Well-Known Playwright Succumbs To Paresis At Charlestown, N.H. His Illness Is A Long One, Health Began to Fail After Death of Second Wife Early in 1898 – Property May Go To State of New Hampshire," The New York Times, Nov. 21, 1900, p. 1.
  • "Madison Square Theatre to Close," The New York Times, Feb. 28, 1908, p. 7.

madison, square, theatre, other, theatres, owned, operated, augustin, daly, daly, theatre, disambiguation, broadway, theatre, manhattan, south, side, 24th, street, between, sixth, avenue, broadway, which, intersects, fifth, avenue, near, that, point, built, 18. For other theatres owned or operated by Augustin Daly see Daly s Theatre disambiguation The Madison Square Theatre was a Broadway theatre in Manhattan on the south side of 24th Street between Sixth Avenue and Broadway which intersects Fifth Avenue near that point It was built in 1863 operated as a theater from 1865 to 1908 and demolished in 1908 to make way for an office building The Madison Square Theatre was the scene of important developments in stage technology theatre design and theatrical tour management For about half its history it had other names including the Fifth Avenue Theatre Daly s Fifth Avenue Theatre Hoyt s Madison Square Theatre and Hoyt s Theatre Madison Square TheatreDaly s Daly s Fifth Avenue Theatre Fifth Avenue Hall Fifth Avenue Opera House Fifth Avenue Theatre Hoyt s Madison Square Theatre Hoyt s Minnie Cumming s Drawing Room TheatreAddressBroadway and W 24th St New York NYCoordinates40 44 32 N 73 59 24 W 40 7422 N 73 9901 W 40 7422 73 9901OwnerA R Eno land various building OperatorGeorge Christy John Brougham James Fisk Jr Augustin Daly Steele MacKaye Mallory Bros A M Palmer Charles H Hoyt Frank McKee Walter N LawrenceTypeBroadwayCapacity900 100 standeesConstructionOpened1865Closed1908Reopened1877Demolished1908Rebuilt1868 1877 1879 80Years active1865 1873 1877 1908ArchitectVarious unknown Contents 1 History 2 Productions 3 Footnotes 4 BibliographyHistory EditMerchant and real estate magnate Amos R Eno leased land next to his Fifth Avenue Hotel in 1862 1 to James Fisk Jr who built an after hours gold trading exchange during the U S Civil War The regular stock exchange found the competition disruptive and soon shut down the operation 2 The building became a performance space the Fifth Avenue Opera House used by George Christy and other minstrel shows from 1865 to 1867 when C H Garland took it over as the Fifth Avenue Theatre for burlesque shows The theatre closed at the beginning of 1868 after one minstrel show manager murdered another after attending a performance John Brougham briefly managed it as Brougham s Theatre in 1869 followed by building owner Fisk who restored the Fifth Avenue name and presented French opera bouffe 3 Augustin Daly became manager later in 1869 sometimes calling it the Fifth Avenue Theatre sometimes Daly s Fifth Avenue or simply Daly s Theatre The house seating area during this period was described as being plated with mirrors for the illusion of immensity with a palette of blush rose neatly framed in white with delicate boundaries of gold Capacity was 900 or 1 000 with standees and gas jets provided interior lighting 2 When the theatre burned to the ground after a matinee on New Year s Day 1873 Daly moved his company and the Fifth Avenue Theatre name to an existing theatre on 28th and Broadway 4 The name similarities continue to cause confusion today It was four years until a new building appeared first called the Fifth Avenue Hall where a magician named Heller performed for several months in 1877 then Minnie Cumming s Drawing Room Theatre George and Marshall Mallory then erected yet another building on the site for actor director playwright Steele Mackaye who had produced a few shows in the small hall in 1879 under a name they kept the Madison Square Theatre Mackaye s famous stage technology improvements included the double stage an elevator the size of the full stage that was raised and lowered by counter weights and reduced scene changes to one or two minutes from five or more The double stage required the builders to excavate an extra deep foundation 5 Ventilation featured a primitive form of air conditioning with cool air drawn in from the roof and circulated to perforations under the seats To increase stage room for action and house room for seats the orchestra was in a balcony above the stage and the conductor received cues by means of electric signals and reflectors Interior decoration was meant to evoke an intimate drawing room with imitation mahogany trim gold and pale colors Shakespeare illustrations 6 and a Tiffany designed drop curtain that burned in an otherwise uneventful fire a few weeks after the reopening 7 The Mallory brothers and Mackaye soon fell out and Mackaye lost the rights to his single commercially successful play Hazel Kirke and his position at the theatre By then Business Manager Daniel Frohman had hired his brothers Gustave and Charles They used Hazel Kirke s long run to implement the nation s first theatrical touring organization with multiple companies of a single play and developed their promotional and management skills 8 The Frohmans along with Marcus Klaw and Abraham Lincoln Erlanger who met while working in the Madison Square Theatre s publicity department 9 and David Belasco who also worked at the theatre in this period became major forces in American theatrical management over the next 35 years The Rev Dr George Mallory owner with his brother and editor of the Episcopal Church publication The Churchman sought to use their ownership of the theatre to elevate the moral tone of the American stage among other things by running only American written plays cast almost exclusively with American actors 10 The Mallorys managed the theatre on this principal themselves for four years In 1885 they brought in impresario A M Palmer who bought them out and managed until 1891 with a more conventionally international mix of plays Palmer was followed by playwright director Charles H Hoyt along with Charles Thompson who died in 1893 and Frank McKee who ran the theatre after Hoyt became incapacitated in 1898 During this time the theatre was variously known as Hoyt s Madison Square Theatre or simply Hoyt s Theatre The Madison Square Theatre name returned in 1898 and remained through the management of Walter N Lawrence until Eno s descendants demolished the building and the Fifth Avenue Hotel in 1908 11 By that time the Theater District had moved uptown to the Times Square area around 42nd Street Productions EditIn its forty years of operation some 250 plays were produced at the Madison Square Theatre Following are productions that ran at least six weeks noting runs of 100 or more performances 12 13 14 15 16 Daly Era 1869 1873 Frou Frou Augustin Daly adaptation of Ludovic Halevy and Henri Meilhac s work 1870 112 performances Saratoga Bronson Howard 1870 101 performances Divorce Augustin Daly dramatization of Anthony Trollope s novel He Knew He Was Right 1871 200 performances Article 47 Augustin Daly 1872 Diamonds Bronson Howard 1872 Mackaye and Mallory Eras 1879 1885 Hazel Kirke Steele Mackaye 1880 486 performances The Professor William Gillette 1881 151 performances Esmerelda Frances Hodgson Burnett 1881 350 performances Young Mrs Winthrop Bronson Howard 1882 183 performances The Russian Honeymoon Mrs Burton Harrison 1883 The Rajah or Wyncot s Ward William Young 1883 236 performances Alpine Roses Hjalmar Hjorth Boyesen 1884 May Blossom or Two Loves David Belasco 1884 170 performances Benjamin Maginley as Tom Blossom The Private Secretary Sir Charles Henry Hawtrey 1884 200 performances Sealed Instructions Mrs Julia Campbell Ver Planck 1885 Anselma 1885 English language adaptation of Victorien Sardou s 1873 play Andrea which was created by Leander Richardson 17 Palmer Era 1885 1891 Saints and Sinners Henry Arthur Jones 1885 111 performances Prince Karl A C Gunter 1886 126 performances Held by the Enemy William Gillette 1886 Jim the Penman Sir Charles L Young 1886 176 performances Captain Swift Dion Boucicault adaptation of Charles Haddon Chambers work 1888 162 performances Aunt Jack Ralph R Lumley 1889 200 performances Beau Brummell Clyde Fitch 1890 156 performances The Pharisee Malcolm Watson 1891 Dinner at Eight J A Ritchie 1891 Hoyt McKee Lawrence Era 1894 1908 A Trip to Chinatown book and lyrics by Charles H Hoyt music by Percy Gaunt 1891 657 performances a record for New York theatre that held until 1919 Irene A Temperance Town Charles H Hoyt 1893 125 performances A Milk White Flag And Its Battle Scarred Followers on the Field of Mars and in the Court of Venus Charles H Hoyt 1894 153 performances The Foundling William Lestocq E M Robson 1895 104 performances The Man Upstairs Augustus Thomas 1895 The Gay Parisians Georges Feydeau Maurice Desvallieres 1895 120 performances A Black Sheep and How it Came to Washington book by Charles H Hoyt music by Richard Stahl Charles H Hoyt William Devere Otis Harlan Mr Conor and Mr Kelly 1896 144 performances A Florida Enchantment A C Gunter 1896 A Contented Woman Charles H Hoyt 1897 The Man from Mexico Alexandre Bisson Edmond Gondinet and H A Du Souchet 1897 Oh Susannah 1898 Dangerfield 95 Mildred Dowling 1898 On and Off Alexandre Bisson 1898 Because She Loved Him So William Gillette 1899 144 performances Why Smith Left Home George Broadhurst 1899 Wheels Within Wheels R C Carton 1899 Coralie and Company Dressmakers Albin Vallabreque Maurice Hennequin 1900 Hodge Podge amp Co adapted from the German by George V Hobart lyrics by Walter Ford music by John W Bratton and Harry Pleon 1900 On the Quiet Augustus Thomas 1901 160 performances The Liberty Belles book and lyrics by Harry B Smith 1901 104 performances Sweet and Twenty Basil Hood 1901 The Diplomat Martha Morton 1902 The Two Schools Alfred Capus 1902 The Secret of Polichinelle Pierre Wolff 1904 124 performances Mrs Temple s Telegram known on the road as Who s Brown Frank Wyatt 1905 The Prince Chap Edward Peple 1905 106 performances The Man on the Box Grace Livingston Furniss from Harold McGrath s novel 1905 111 performances David Garrick Charles J Bell 1905 The Three of Us Rachel Crothers 1906 227 performances Footnotes Edit Brown History of the New York Stage v2 p 399 a b Another Disaster Total Destruction of the Fifth Avenue Theatre by Fire The New York Times Jan 2 1873 p 1 Brown History of the New York Stage v2 p 400 Brown History of the New York Stage v2 p 404 414 The Madison Square to Go The New York Times Jul 18 1888 p 1 The Madison Square Theatre Mr Mackaye s Improvements In The Stage Mechanism The New York Times Feb 1 1880 p 5 Fire In A Theatre The Handsome Act Drop Of The Madison Square Theatre Destroyed The New York Times Feb 27 1880 p 5 Searles Six Books Frohman The Bookman Nov 1916 p 306 Theatre Magazine June 1922 p 356 Rev G S Mallory s Death Madison Square Theatre Wholesome Plays Only Presented The New York Times Mar 3 1897 p 1 The Passing of the Madison Square Theatre Theatre Magazine February 1908 pp 42 46 viii Brown History of the New York Stage v2 pp 399 447 Chapman and Sherwood The Best Plays of 1894 1899 pp 83 260 Mantle and Sherwood The Best Plays of 1899 1909 pp 346 584 Madison Square Theatre ibdb com Numbers of performances are as reported or where not reported generally before 1894 are approximated based on information reported and the Mantle Chapman Sherwood assumption of eight performances per week during this general time period Weldon B Durham 1986 American Theatre Companies 1749 1887 Bloomsbury Academic p 326 Bibliography EditBrown Thomas Allston A History of the New York Stage from the First Performance in 1732 to 1901 Volume 2 New York Dodd Mead and Company 1903 Chapman John and Garrison P Sherwood eds The Best Plays of 1894 1899 New York Dodd Mead amp Company 1955 Heard on Broadway Theatre Magazine V 35 No 255 June 1922 p 356 Madison Square Theatre Internet Broadway Database www ibdb com Mantle Burns and Garrison P Sherwood eds The Best Plays of 1899 1909 Philadelphia The Blakiston Company 1944 Searles Stanhope Six Books of the Month Charles Frohman Manager and Man The Bookman v44 n3 Nov 1916 p 306 Another Disaster Total Destruction of the Fifth Avenue Theatre by Fire The Building Fortunately Empty at the Time Rapid and Fierce Progress of the Flames Exciting Scenes in the Lobbies of the Adjoining Hotels Heroic and Successful Efforts of the Firemen The New York Times Jan 2 1873 p 1 The Madison Square Theatre Mr Mackaye s Improvements In The Stage Mechanism The New York Times Feb 1 1880 p 5 The Madison Square to Go Mr Eno Will Tear the Theatre Down After the Lease Expires An Extension to the Fifth Avenue Hotel Will be Erected on the Site The New York Times July 18 1888 p 1 Eno changed his mind shortly after this article was published and did not tear down the theatre Rev G S Mallory s Death He Was a Noted Man Whose Career Was an Eventful Interesting and Influential One Invested Money in Dramas The Mallory Family Built the Madison Square Theatre and Sent Out Hazel Kirke Companies Wholesome Plays Only Presented The New York Times Mar 3 1897 p 1 Charles H Hoyt Is Dead Well Known Playwright Succumbs To Paresis At Charlestown N H His Illness Is A Long One Health Began to Fail After Death of Second Wife Early in 1898 Property May Go To State of New Hampshire The New York Times Nov 21 1900 p 1 Madison Square Theatre to Close The New York Times Feb 28 1908 p 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Madison Square Theatre amp oldid 1174225432, 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