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Peninsula Theatre

The Peninsula Theatre was a movie palace in Burlingame, California, that ran from 1926 to 1974. In 1957, the name was changed to Fox Burlingame. The theater was shuttered in 1974 and demolished in 1975 to make way for a shopping mall.

Peninsula Theatre
(1926–1957)
Fox Burlingame
(1957–1974)
Address1415 Burlingame Avenue
Burlingame, California
Coordinates37°34′39″N 122°21′02″W / 37.5774565°N 122.3504942°W / 37.5774565; -122.3504942
OwnerPeninsula Theatres Corporation
Ellis John Arkush, President
(1926–1929)
Fox West Coast Theatres
    (1929–1974)
OperatorEllis J. Arkush Entertainment
    (1926–1957)
Fox West Coast Theatres
    (1929–1974)
TypeMovie Palace
Capacity2,000 seats
    (1926–1957)
1808 seats
    (1957–1974)
Screens1
Current useShopping mall
Construction
Opened12 October 1926 (1926-10-12)
Renovated1957
Closed14 September 1974 (1974-09-14)
Demolished1 October 1975 (1975-10-01)
Years active47
ArchitectWeeks and Day

History edit

The Peninsula Theatre was located at 1415 Burlingame Avenue, Burlingame, California. It opened October 12, 1926 – toward the end of the silent film era. It was the sixth of a chain of theaters operated by The Peninsula Theaters Corporation and was intended to replace the Garden Burlingame. The other five were all located on the San Francisco Peninsula.

Design and construction was commissioned by Peninsula Theatres Corporation doing business as Ellis J. Arkush Entertainment, a privately held California enterprise headed by Ellis J. Arkush, his brother, Frank Arkush, and an attorney, Eph Karelsen.

On December 28, 1925, prior to opening the Peninsula Theatre, Ellis J. Arkush sold a 50% interest, billed as a million dollar merger, in all his theaters, to West Coast Theatres, Inc., which, then, was the largest cinema theater company in the western North America. But Ellis, under the auspices of Peninsula Theatres Corporation, retained active management of the Peninsula Theatre. Policy and direction of the other theaters were assigned to Archie M. Bowles (né Archer Mckee Bowles; 1889–1944), General Manager of the Northern Branch of West Coast Theatres.[1]

The opening on October 12, 1926, premiered the silent film, Upstage, and included an appearance by comedian Charley Chase. Also, the $50,000 Robert-Morton theater organ was played by Elbert La Chelle (né Elbert George Lachelle; 1905–1990), pronounced "la shell," and Elmer Vincent (né William Elmer Vincent; 1893–1952).[2] Milt Franklyn and his nine-piece band was the founding house band.

The Peninsula Theatre hosted vaudeville on Saturday nights.

An audience of about 250 attended Fox Burlingame's final showing, a double-feature – Chinatown and The New Centurions — Saturday, September 14, 1974. Beverly Brehmer (née Beverly June Brehmer; born 1929) was the theater manager.[3]

Peninsula Theatres Corporation edit

Peninsula Theatres Corporation doing business as Ellis J. Arkush Entertainment, a privately held California enterprise headed by Ellis J. Arkush, his brother, Frank Arkush, and an attorney, Eph Karelsen.

Theater City Street Architect(s)     Notes
Managed by Arkush before the Peninsula opened
1)  Bell Redwood City:  865 Main Street, near
Stambaugh Street[i]
Opened in 1910 – Arkush leased it September 15, 1914;[4] his first theater venture; he remodeled it, adding a lobby and bringing in 150 chairs
1)  Garden Burlingame:  Burlingame Avenue Ernest L. Norberg
(né Ernest Louis Norberg; 1889–1979)
Opened in 1918 by George Gates (né George Ward Gates; 1872–1962); Arkush leased it for 10 years beginning March 1, 1920;[5] closed in 1925
2)  Regent San Mateo:  Corner of Baldwin &
San Mateo Drive
W.D. Shea
(né William D. Shea; 1866–1931)
Opened May 4, 1915, by Hyman ("Herman") Levin (né Hyman Schloeme Levin; 1875–1974); originally 600 air-cushioned seats; initially contracted, for distribution, with Paramount Pictures Corporation; closed September 11, 1927, after Arkush purchased the San Mateo Theatre
3)  Sequoia Redwood City:  2114 Broadway Opened August 29, 1916, by Arkush, his second theatre – 750 seats – it was managed from 1922 to 1926 by William ("Bill") J. O'Brien (1875–1926); closed in 1929, when the "new" Sequoia opened
4)  Varsity Palo Alto:  263 University Avenue at
Ramona Street
Erected 1911, in a spot opposite the current Varsity Theatre. The original Varsity was initially owned by Frank LeSuer (né Frank Allen LeSeur; 1859–1924) and his brother-in-law, Ira G. Betts (1856–1929). Around 1922, Betts sold his interest in the Varsity to LeSuer and a partnership was formed with Arkush, and the two theaters – the Varsity and the Stanford – were incorporated as the Palo Alto Theater Company – Arkush as President and LeSeur as Vice President – with a capitalization of $50,000, with the aim of developing a chain of Peninsula motion-picture houses, starting with the relocation (then owned by Charles H. Strub, a dentist). From about 1928 to about 1931, Sherman, Clay & Co. sold radios, phonographs, records, and pianos from the location
5)  Stanford Palo Alto:  Weeks and Day Opened June 7, 1925, by Ellis Arkush[6]
Managed by Arkush after the Peninsula opened
6)  San Mateo San Mateo:  66 East 3rd Avenue Irving F. Morrow &
William I. Garren
Opened July 23, 1925, by Max Blumenfeld (1877–1936) under the auspices of the Blumenfeld Theatre Circuit – 1,600 seats;[7] acquired September 3, 1927, by Arkush
7)  Sequoia Redwood City:  2215 Broadway[8] Reid & Reid Opened January 2, 1929, by Arkush

Original theater (1926) edit

1927 edit

The Peninsula Theatre was originally designed for both (i) vaudeville stage shows and (i) silent movies. Construction and development outlay was US$500,000 (equivalent to $8,605,263 in 2023, inflation adjusted estimate)[9] Weeks & Day were the architects. The original Peninsula Theatre had 2,000 seats and was ornately Spanish baroque in style, featuring staircases in the lobby ascending between pillars inset with mosaic-like panels depicting animals.

Theater organ edit

Make

Only the third of its type and size to be installed in a Pacific Coast theater.[11]

Pipes

Console

  • Solid mahogany 3-manual and pedal console
  • 13 ranks
  • 153 stops in the stoprail
  • Manual compass (chromatic range) is 61 keys
  • Pedal compass had 32 notes
  • Possibly a "Carlsted" console, named for Morton's head draftsman, Paul Simon Carlsted (1891–1982)

Mechanical

Power

  • Centrifugal blower driven by a 10-horsepower motor, voiced on 15-inch wind pressure (a size capable of delivering air at 1900 C.F.M. – cubic feet per minute) ("Orgoblo" centrifugal blower manufactured by The Spencer Turbine Co. of Hartford)
  • A 70-ampere, 10-volt generator, driven by a 2-horsepower provided the voltage for the magnets that operate the valve mechanism
  • A special 24-inch vacuum blower, powered by a 1-horsepower motor, supplied the exhaust air for the piano mechanism
  • All motors were controlled by switches from the console

Piano

  • A piano, placed in a separate compartment in the orchestra pit, was also controlled from the console

Installation engineer

Current status

  • Dismantled and dispersed (circa 2007); was in possession of Dale Merrill Haskin (1942–2007), a collector of theater organs, late of Portland, Oregon, who also owned the San Francisco Orpheum organ. Much of Haskin's collection is now with the Columbia River Theatre Organ Society of Portland.

Housing for the organ pipes

  • The auditorium featured a massive plasterwork proscenium, and was flanked on both sides with arched organ fronts for the expression chambers.[12]

Theater renovation (1957) edit

In 1957, Fox West Coast Theatres,[ii] then the owners, spent $100,000 renovating the theater, this time 1808 seats and was reopened with an extravagant ceremony on the evening of August 16, 1957, and henceforth was named the Fox Burlingame.[13] For many years, the theatre's roof featured a two-sided lightbulb sign, with incandescent fireworks, similar to that which still survives atop the Grand Lake Theatre in Oakland. The Fox Burlingame Theater closed September 14, 1974, and was demolished the following year to make way for the Fox Mall,[14] a shopping center developed by two investors – Mario Castro and Joseph Karp. The Fox Mall was built and dedicated in 1979.

Ownership edit

Ellis John Arkush, a native of New York and 1910 graduate of Columbia University (civil engineering), entered the theater business in Redwood City in 1914 where he built the Sequoia Theater. He added the Variety and Stanford Theatres in Palo Alto, the Peninsula Theatre, and the San Mateo Theatre in San Mateo. Ellis Arkush was the president of Peninsula Theatres Corporation. The entire chain was sold in 1929 to Fox West Coast Theatres.

Selected personnel edit

Management edit

Peninsula Theatres Corporation dba Ellis J. Arkush Entertainment

  • Ellis John Arkush (1888–1974), President of Peninsula Theatres Corporation, also brother of Frank
  • Frank Ephriam Arkush (1884–1947), brother of Ellis
  • Eph Karelsen (né Ephraim Adolphus Karelsen; 1871–1956), attorney and Arkush's maternal cousin
  • Ray Kelsall (né Ray Roland Kelsall; 1889–1953), founding business manager who, before had been manager of the Garden Theatre. He had a staff of 22 – including
  • W.H. Augustus, Jr., house manager
  • Hale Warn (né Hale Knowlton Warn; 1910–1979), head usher
  • Walter Hawthorne Farley (1890–1960), chief operator (projectionist)
  • Andrew Hillgard, assistant operator
  • F. H. Thomason (né Floyd Harris Thomason; 1896–1976), stage manager, and later, projectionist[15]
  • Dorothy Durant (née Josephine E. Durant; 1904–1953), cashier
  • Agnes Durant (née Agnes Magdalen Durant; 1909–1992), assistant cashier (Dorothy's younger sister)

Fox West Coast Theatres (beginning 1957)

  • "Billie" Tannehill (né William Jackson Tannehill; 1925–2001), theater manager in Burlingame from about 1955 to 1967. He later managed the Century 21 Theatre in San Jose, which opened in 1963 and closed in 2014. He was survived by his wife, Marlene Grace Murphy (maiden; 1936–2011), and three children. Tannehill started managing theaters in the late 1940s, after serving in the Navy during World War II. He managed theaters for Fox West Coast, Mann Theatres, and finished his career with Century Theatres, spending the last 17 years at Century 21.
  • Ward Stoopes (né Ward Farmiloe Stoopes; 1926–1999), a theater manager in the San Francisco area who began his career at Fox Burlingame
  • Beverly Brehmer (née Beverly June Brehmer; born 1929), manager at the Fox Burlingame when it closed September 14, 1974, had worked for Fox West Coast Theatres since the late 1950s

Entertainers edit

Photo links edit

Photos from the Los Angeles Public Library, all dated 1945:

  • 1 Marquee LAPL00071370 (Los Angeles Public Library call number)
  • 2 Lobby stairs LAPL00071371
  • 3 Lobby LAPL00071372
  • 4 Lobby LAPL00071373
  • 5 Proscenium LAPL00071374
  • 6 Marquee, front LAPL00071375
  • 7 Marquee, front LAPL00071376[17]
  • 8 The Peninsula in 1930, San Francisco Chronicle file photo

Projection equipment edit

In the beginning of 1929, the Peninsula was operating two 35 mm Fulco projectors, Ernemann design, manufactured by E.E. Fulton Company of Chicago[18][19] – Carl Henry Fulton (1896–1947), President and son of the firms namesake, Elmer E. Fulton (1861–1921).

See also edit

Miscellaneous edit

The Golden State Theatre houses a number of items saved from other theaters, which happened to match items which were missing, including one stained glass exit sign from the Peninsula Theatre.

Notes and references edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The address numbering on Main Street in Redwood City has changed over the years. The 1916 directory shows the Bell at 263-265 Main.
  2. ^ Fox West Coast Theatres was the outgrowth of a 1929 acquisition by Fox Film Corporation of West Coast Theatres, Inc., and its affiliate, Wesco, for a sum exceeding $100,000,000. West Coast Theatres, at the time, controlled more than 350 theaters. ("Fox Co. Buys Theatre Chain," Petaluma Daily Morning Courier, January 26, 1928, p. 7; accessible via Newspapers.com at www.newspapers.com/clip/50694079/petaluma-daily-morning-courier/) Fox West Coast Theatres went into bankruptcy and was sold for $17,000,000 to The National Theatres Corporation, led by the Skouras brothers, Charles Skouras, President. Charles' brother, George Skouras, went on to become President of United Artists Theaters. A third brother, Spyros Skouras, was President of 20th Century Fox from 1942 to 1962.

References edit

  1. ^ "Showhouse Merger Here Is Announced By E.J. Arkuksh," The Times (San Mateo), December 29, 1925, p. 1 (accessible via Newspapers.com at www.newspapers.com/clip/50695100/the-times/)
  2. ^ "Elbert La Chelle," Theatre Organ Journal of the American Theatre Organ Society, Vol. 25, pps. 16–18
  3. ^ "Sad Farewell to Fox Closing," by Esther Plottel (née Garfinkel; 1906–1985), The Times (San Mateo), September 19, 1974, p. 27 (accessible via Newspapers.com at www.newspapers.com/clip/50695356/the-times/)
  4. ^ Bell Theater Lease, Redwood City, California, Ellis J. Arkush (lessee), dated September 25, 1914, filed September 26, 1914, Fee Book No. 29136, Lease Books, Vol. 8, pps. 50–51, San Mateo Country Record Repository
    Source: "Index to San Mateo County Leases; 1856–1921: An index to leases recorded in Lease Books 1-9, Miscellaneous Books and Deed Books through 1921," by Lauren Perritt, Cath Trindle, Russ Brabec, San Mateo County Genealogical Society (accessible at www.smcgs.org/sites/default/files/database_files/lease%20index_0.pdf)
  5. ^ Garden Theater Lease, Burlingame, California, Ellis J. Arkush (lessee), dated March 1, 1920September 25, 1914, filed March 6, 1920, Fee Book No. 71011, Lease Books, Vol. 9, pps. 126–127, San Mateo Country Record Repository
    Source: "Index to San Mateo County Leases; 1856–1921: An index to leases recorded in Lease Books 1-9, Miscellaneous Books and Deed Books through 1921," by Lauren Perritt, Cath Trindle, Russ Brabec, San Mateo County Genealogical Society (accessible at www.smcgs.org/sites/default/files/database_files/lease%20index_0.pdf)
  6. ^ "Regional News From Correspondents: San Francisco," Motion Picture News, July 4, 1925, p. 106
  7. ^ "Regional News From Correspondents: San Francisco," Motion Picture News, October 7, 1927, p. 1118
  8. ^ "Opening of New Theatre Last Night is Big Success," The Times (San Mateo), Vol. 8, No. 113, October 13, 1926, pps. 1 (col. 1) & 8 (col. 8); OCLC 27911400; LCCN 93-51487 (accessible via Newspapers.com at www.newspapers.com/clip/50694366/the-times/)
  9. ^ "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–  ," Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Community Development Project (retrieved January 2, 2018)
  10. ^ Encyclopedia of the American Theatre Organ, Vol. 2, by David L Junchen (born 1946), Showcase Publications (1985), p. 509; OCLC 680013591
  11. ^ "New Organ at Peninsula is Masterpiece," The Times (San Mateo), October 12, 1926, pps. 2A & 3A (accessible via Newspapers.com at www.newspapers.com/clip/50694300/the-times/)
  12. ^ "New Peninsula To Open Here" (p. 1-A), and "Latest Addition" (p. 2-A), The Times (San Mateo), Vol. 8, No. 111, October 11, 1926; OCLC 27911400; LCCN 93-51487
    (note: This issue published several descriptive articles about the Peninsula Theatre; but several sections of the digital version on Newspapers.com are illegible)
    (accessible via Newspapers.com at www.newspapers.com/clip/50694154/the-times/ and www.newspapers.com/clip/50694300/the-times/)
  13. ^ "Gala Reopening Set in Burlingame," The Times (San Mateo), Vol. 57, No. 196, August 16, 1957, sect. 2, p. 1; OCLC 27911400; LCCN 93-51487 (accessible via Newspapers.com at www.newspapers.com/clip/50695055/the-times/)
  14. ^ "Fox Burlingame Theatre," at Cinema Treasures (retrieved April 18, 2018)
  15. ^ "Flashback on Early Fillums" and "Palaces of the Silent Screen," by Donald Paul Ringler (1920–2008), The Times (San Mateo), February 19, 1977, pps. 2A & 3A (accessible via Newspapers.com at www.newspapers.com/clip/50695142/the-times/ and www.newspapers.com/clip/50695228/the-times/)
  16. ^ (see ASCAP Directory)
  17. ^ Digitization & Special Collections, Los Angeles Public Library Photo Collection
  18. ^ "Fulco Projector" (advertisement), Motion Picture News, January 12, 1929, p. 93
  19. ^ "Fulco Projector" (advertisement), Motion Picture Projectionist, October 1929, p. 8

External links edit

  • Fox Burlingame at Cinema Treasures

peninsula, theatre, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, 2018, learn, when, remove, this, message, movie, palace, b. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2018 Learn how and when to remove this message The Peninsula Theatre was a movie palace in Burlingame California that ran from 1926 to 1974 In 1957 the name was changed to Fox Burlingame The theater was shuttered in 1974 and demolished in 1975 to make way for a shopping mall Peninsula Theatre 1926 1957 Fox Burlingame 1957 1974 Address1415 Burlingame AvenueBurlingame CaliforniaCoordinates37 34 39 N 122 21 02 W 37 5774565 N 122 3504942 W 37 5774565 122 3504942OwnerPeninsula Theatres CorporationEllis John Arkush President 1926 1929 Fox West Coast Theatres 1929 1974 OperatorEllis J Arkush Entertainment 1926 1957 Fox West Coast Theatres 1929 1974 TypeMovie PalaceCapacity2 000 seats 1926 1957 1808 seats 1957 1974 Screens1Current useShopping mallConstructionOpened12 October 1926 1926 10 12 Renovated1957Closed14 September 1974 1974 09 14 Demolished1 October 1975 1975 10 01 Years active47ArchitectWeeks and Day Contents 1 History 2 Peninsula Theatres Corporation 3 Original theater 1926 3 1 1927 3 1 1 Theater organ 4 Theater renovation 1957 5 Ownership 6 Selected personnel 6 1 Management 6 2 Entertainers 7 Photo links 8 Projection equipment 9 See also 10 Miscellaneous 11 Notes and references 11 1 Notes 11 2 References 12 External linksHistory editThe Peninsula Theatre was located at 1415 Burlingame Avenue Burlingame California It opened October 12 1926 toward the end of the silent film era It was the sixth of a chain of theaters operated by The Peninsula Theaters Corporation and was intended to replace the Garden Burlingame The other five were all located on the San Francisco Peninsula Design and construction was commissioned by Peninsula Theatres Corporation doing business as Ellis J Arkush Entertainment a privately held California enterprise headed by Ellis J Arkush his brother Frank Arkush and an attorney Eph Karelsen On December 28 1925 prior to opening the Peninsula Theatre Ellis J Arkush sold a 50 interest billed as a million dollar merger in all his theaters to West Coast Theatres Inc which then was the largest cinema theater company in the western North America But Ellis under the auspices of Peninsula Theatres Corporation retained active management of the Peninsula Theatre Policy and direction of the other theaters were assigned to Archie M Bowles ne Archer Mckee Bowles 1889 1944 General Manager of the Northern Branch of West Coast Theatres 1 The opening on October 12 1926 premiered the silent film Upstage and included an appearance by comedian Charley Chase Also the 50 000 Robert Morton theater organ was played by Elbert La Chelle ne Elbert George Lachelle 1905 1990 pronounced la shell and Elmer Vincent ne William Elmer Vincent 1893 1952 2 Milt Franklyn and his nine piece band was the founding house band The Peninsula Theatre hosted vaudeville on Saturday nights An audience of about 250 attended Fox Burlingame s final showing a double feature Chinatown and The New Centurions Saturday September 14 1974 Beverly Brehmer nee Beverly June Brehmer born 1929 was the theater manager 3 Peninsula Theatres Corporation editPeninsula Theatres Corporation doing business as Ellis J Arkush Entertainment a privately held California enterprise headed by Ellis J Arkush his brother Frank Arkush and an attorney Eph Karelsen Theater City Street Architect s Notes Managed by Arkush before the Peninsula opened 1 Bell Redwood City 865 Main Street nearStambaugh Street i Opened in 1910 Arkush leased it September 15 1914 4 his first theater venture he remodeled it adding a lobby and bringing in 150 chairs 1 Garden Burlingame Burlingame Avenue Ernest L Norberg ne Ernest Louis Norberg 1889 1979 Opened in 1918 by George Gates ne George Ward Gates 1872 1962 Arkush leased it for 10 years beginning March 1 1920 5 closed in 1925 2 Regent San Mateo Corner of Baldwin amp San Mateo Drive W D Shea ne William D Shea 1866 1931 Opened May 4 1915 by Hyman Herman Levin ne Hyman Schloeme Levin 1875 1974 originally 600 air cushioned seats initially contracted for distribution with Paramount Pictures Corporation closed September 11 1927 after Arkush purchased the San Mateo Theatre 3 Sequoia Redwood City 2114 Broadway Opened August 29 1916 by Arkush his second theatre 750 seats it was managed from 1922 to 1926 by William Bill J O Brien 1875 1926 closed in 1929 when the new Sequoia opened 4 Varsity Palo Alto 263 University Avenue atRamona Street Erected 1911 in a spot opposite the current Varsity Theatre The original Varsity was initially owned by Frank LeSuer ne Frank Allen LeSeur 1859 1924 and his brother in law Ira G Betts 1856 1929 Around 1922 Betts sold his interest in the Varsity to LeSuer and a partnership was formed with Arkush and the two theaters the Varsity and the Stanford were incorporated as the Palo Alto Theater Company Arkush as President and LeSeur as Vice President with a capitalization of 50 000 with the aim of developing a chain of Peninsula motion picture houses starting with the relocation then owned by Charles H Strub a dentist From about 1928 to about 1931 Sherman Clay amp Co sold radios phonographs records and pianos from the location 5 Stanford Palo Alto Weeks and Day Opened June 7 1925 by Ellis Arkush 6 Managed by Arkush after the Peninsula opened 6 San Mateo San Mateo 66 East 3rd Avenue Irving F Morrow amp William I Garren Opened July 23 1925 by Max Blumenfeld 1877 1936 under the auspices of the Blumenfeld Theatre Circuit 1 600 seats 7 acquired September 3 1927 by Arkush 7 Sequoia Redwood City 2215 Broadway 8 Reid amp Reid Opened January 2 1929 by ArkushOriginal theater 1926 edit1927 edit The Peninsula Theatre was originally designed for both i vaudeville stage shows and i silent movies Construction and development outlay was US 500 000 equivalent to 8 605 263 in 2023 inflation adjusted estimate 9 Weeks amp Day were the architects The original Peninsula Theatre had 2 000 seats and was ornately Spanish baroque in style featuring staircases in the lobby ascending between pillars inset with mosaic like panels depicting animals Theater organ edit Make Robert Morton Organ Company of San Francisco and New York Opus number not known likely range 2293 2412 10 Only the third of its type and size to be installed in a Pacific Coast theater 11 Pipes A thousand thirty three pipes capable of producing orchestral instrument sounds that included the tuba English horn concert flute viola violin kinura oboe clarinet and bass violin For accompaniment music the organ had diapason tibia plena voix celeste and vox humana for the human voice It also had a harp marimba chrysoglott harp orchestral bells glockenspiel chimes xylophone bass drum tympani cymbal crash cymbal snare drum tom tom castanets tambourine triangle and sleigh bells Console Solid mahogany 3 manual and pedal console 13 ranks 153 stops in the stoprail Manual compass chromatic range is 61 keys Pedal compass had 32 notes Possibly a Carlsted console named for Morton s head draftsman Paul Simon Carlsted 1891 1982 Mechanical Electro pneumatic action chests with individual expression shutters controlled various shadings More than 1 500 electromagnets operated the valve mechanism Power Centrifugal blower driven by a 10 horsepower motor voiced on 15 inch wind pressure a size capable of delivering air at 1900 C F M cubic feet per minute Orgoblo centrifugal blower manufactured by The Spencer Turbine Co of Hartford A 70 ampere 10 volt generator driven by a 2 horsepower provided the voltage for the magnets that operate the valve mechanism A special 24 inch vacuum blower powered by a 1 horsepower motor supplied the exhaust air for the piano mechanism All motors were controlled by switches from the console Piano A piano placed in a separate compartment in the orchestra pit was also controlled from the console Installation engineer Leo F Schoenstein ne Leo Ferdinand Schoenstein 1878 1951 under the auspices of Schoenstein amp Co of San Francisco technician for the Morgan Organ Company personally directed the installation Current status Dismantled and dispersed circa 2007 was in possession of Dale Merrill Haskin 1942 2007 a collector of theater organs late of Portland Oregon who also owned the San Francisco Orpheum organ Much of Haskin s collection is now with the Columbia River Theatre Organ Society of Portland Housing for the organ pipes The auditorium featured a massive plasterwork proscenium and was flanked on both sides with arched organ fronts for the expression chambers 12 Theater renovation 1957 editIn 1957 Fox West Coast Theatres ii then the owners spent 100 000 renovating the theater this time 1808 seats and was reopened with an extravagant ceremony on the evening of August 16 1957 and henceforth was named the Fox Burlingame 13 For many years the theatre s roof featured a two sided lightbulb sign with incandescent fireworks similar to that which still survives atop the Grand Lake Theatre in Oakland The Fox Burlingame Theater closed September 14 1974 and was demolished the following year to make way for the Fox Mall 14 a shopping center developed by two investors Mario Castro and Joseph Karp The Fox Mall was built and dedicated in 1979 Ownership editEllis John Arkush a native of New York and 1910 graduate of Columbia University civil engineering entered the theater business in Redwood City in 1914 where he built the Sequoia Theater He added the Variety and Stanford Theatres in Palo Alto the Peninsula Theatre and the San Mateo Theatre in San Mateo Ellis Arkush was the president of Peninsula Theatres Corporation The entire chain was sold in 1929 to Fox West Coast Theatres Selected personnel editManagement edit Peninsula Theatres Corporation dba Ellis J Arkush Entertainment Ellis John Arkush 1888 1974 President of Peninsula Theatres Corporation also brother of Frank Frank Ephriam Arkush 1884 1947 brother of Ellis Eph Karelsen ne Ephraim Adolphus Karelsen 1871 1956 attorney and Arkush s maternal cousin Ray Kelsall ne Ray Roland Kelsall 1889 1953 founding business manager who before had been manager of the Garden Theatre He had a staff of 22 including W H Augustus Jr house manager Hale Warn ne Hale Knowlton Warn 1910 1979 head usher Walter Hawthorne Farley 1890 1960 chief operator projectionist Andrew Hillgard assistant operator F H Thomason ne Floyd Harris Thomason 1896 1976 stage manager and later projectionist 15 Dorothy Durant nee Josephine E Durant 1904 1953 cashier Agnes Durant nee Agnes Magdalen Durant 1909 1992 assistant cashier Dorothy s younger sister Fox West Coast Theatres beginning 1957 Billie Tannehill ne William Jackson Tannehill 1925 2001 theater manager in Burlingame from about 1955 to 1967 He later managed the Century 21 Theatre in San Jose which opened in 1963 and closed in 2014 He was survived by his wife Marlene Grace Murphy maiden 1936 2011 and three children Tannehill started managing theaters in the late 1940s after serving in the Navy during World War II He managed theaters for Fox West Coast Mann Theatres and finished his career with Century Theatres spending the last 17 years at Century 21 Ward Stoopes ne Ward Farmiloe Stoopes 1926 1999 a theater manager in the San Francisco area who began his career at Fox Burlingame Beverly Brehmer nee Beverly June Brehmer born 1929 manager at the Fox Burlingame when it closed September 14 1974 had worked for Fox West Coast Theatres since the late 1950s Entertainers edit Milt Franklyn ne Milton J Franklyn 1897 1962 16 Photo links editPhotos from the Los Angeles Public Library all dated 1945 1 Marquee LAPL00071370 Los Angeles Public Library call number 2 Lobby stairs LAPL00071371 3 Lobby LAPL00071372 4 Lobby LAPL00071373 5 Proscenium LAPL00071374 6 Marquee front LAPL00071375 7 Marquee front LAPL00071376 17 8 The Peninsula in 1930 San Francisco Chronicle file photoProjection equipment editIn the beginning of 1929 the Peninsula was operating two 35 mm Fulco projectors Ernemann design manufactured by E E Fulton Company of Chicago 18 19 Carl Henry Fulton 1896 1947 President and son of the firms namesake Elmer E Fulton 1861 1921 See also editFox TheatresMiscellaneous editThe Golden State Theatre houses a number of items saved from other theaters which happened to match items which were missing including one stained glass exit sign from the Peninsula Theatre Notes and references editNotes edit The address numbering on Main Street in Redwood City has changed over the years The 1916 directory shows the Bell at 263 265 Main Fox West Coast Theatres was the outgrowth of a 1929 acquisition by Fox Film Corporation of West Coast Theatres Inc and its affiliate Wesco for a sum exceeding 100 000 000 West Coast Theatres at the time controlled more than 350 theaters Fox Co Buys Theatre Chain Petaluma Daily Morning Courier January 26 1928 p 7 accessible via Newspapers com at www wbr newspapers wbr com wbr clip wbr 50694079 wbr petaluma daily morning courier wbr Fox West Coast Theatres went into bankruptcy and was sold for 17 000 000 to The National Theatres Corporation led by the Skouras brothers Charles Skouras President Charles brother George Skouras went on to become President of United Artists Theaters A third brother Spyros Skouras was President of 20th Century Fox from 1942 to 1962 References edit Showhouse Merger Here Is Announced By E J Arkuksh The Times San Mateo December 29 1925 p 1 accessible via Newspapers com at www wbr newspapers wbr com wbr clip wbr 50695100 wbr the times wbr Elbert La Chelle Theatre Organ Journal of the American Theatre Organ Society Vol 25 pps 16 18 Sad Farewell to Fox Closing by Esther Plottel nee Garfinkel 1906 1985 The Times San Mateo September 19 1974 p 27 accessible via Newspapers com at www wbr newspapers wbr com wbr clip wbr 50695356 wbr the times wbr Bell Theater Lease Redwood City California Ellis J Arkush lessee dated September 25 1914 filed September 26 1914 Fee Book No 29136 Lease Books Vol 8 pps 50 51 San Mateo Country Record RepositorySource Index to San Mateo County Leases 1856 1921 An index to leases recorded in Lease Books 1 9 Miscellaneous Books and Deed Books through 1921 by Lauren Perritt Cath Trindle Russ Brabec San Mateo County Genealogical Society accessible at www wbr smcgs wbr org wbr sites wbr default wbr files wbr database wbr files wbr lease 20index wbr 0 wbr pdf Garden Theater Lease Burlingame California Ellis J Arkush lessee dated March 1 1920September 25 1914 filed March 6 1920 Fee Book No 71011 Lease Books Vol 9 pps 126 127 San Mateo Country Record RepositorySource Index to San Mateo County Leases 1856 1921 An index to leases recorded in Lease Books 1 9 Miscellaneous Books and Deed Books through 1921 by Lauren Perritt Cath Trindle Russ Brabec San Mateo County Genealogical Society accessible at www wbr smcgs wbr org wbr sites wbr default wbr files wbr database wbr files wbr lease 20index wbr 0 wbr pdf Regional News From Correspondents San Francisco Motion Picture News July 4 1925 p 106 Regional News From Correspondents San Francisco Motion Picture News October 7 1927 p 1118 Opening of New Theatre Last Night is Big Success The Times San Mateo Vol 8 No 113 October 13 1926 pps 1 col 1 amp 8 col 8 OCLC 27911400 LCCN 93 51487 accessible via Newspapers com at www wbr newspapers wbr com wbr clip wbr 50694366 wbr the times wbr Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Community Development Project retrieved January 2 2018 Encyclopedia of the American Theatre Organ Vol 2 by David L Junchen born 1946 Showcase Publications 1985 p 509 OCLC 680013591 New Organ at Peninsula is Masterpiece The Times San Mateo October 12 1926 pps 2A amp 3A accessible via Newspapers com at www wbr newspapers wbr com wbr clip wbr 50694300 wbr the times wbr New Peninsula To Open Here p 1 A and Latest Addition p 2 A The Times San Mateo Vol 8 No 111 October 11 1926 OCLC 27911400 LCCN 93 51487 note This issue published several descriptive articles about the Peninsula Theatre but several sections of the digital version on Newspapers com are illegible accessible via Newspapers com at www wbr newspapers wbr com wbr clip wbr 50694154 wbr the times wbr and www wbr newspapers wbr com wbr clip wbr 50694300 wbr the times wbr Gala Reopening Set in Burlingame The Times San Mateo Vol 57 No 196 August 16 1957 sect 2 p 1 OCLC 27911400 LCCN 93 51487 accessible via Newspapers com at www wbr newspapers wbr com wbr clip wbr 50695055 wbr the times wbr Fox Burlingame Theatre at Cinema Treasures retrieved April 18 2018 Flashback on Early Fillums and Palaces of the Silent Screen by Donald Paul Ringler 1920 2008 The Times San Mateo February 19 1977 pps 2A amp 3A accessible via Newspapers com at www wbr newspapers wbr com wbr clip wbr 50695142 wbr the times wbr and www wbr newspapers wbr com wbr clip wbr 50695228 wbr the times wbr see ASCAP Directory Digitization amp Special Collections Los Angeles Public Library Photo Collection Fulco Projector advertisement Motion Picture News January 12 1929 p 93 Fulco Projector advertisement Motion Picture Projectionist October 1929 p 8External links editFox Burlingame at Cinema Treasures Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peninsula Theatre amp oldid 1167783778, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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