Saenger Theatre Hattiesburg, Mississippi |
201 Forrest Street |
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The Saenger Theatre in Hattiesburg, shortly before opening day |
The Hattiesburg Saenger Theatre opened on Thanksgiving Day in 1929. It was architect Emile Weil's last Saenger Theatre - the Saenger chain had been sold to Publix while the theatre was under construction.
The theatre opened with its advertising referring to it as "A Publix Theatre", instead of the usual "One of the Saenger Theatres" mentions. The founding Saenger brothers & organization received little mention. The newspaper spread focused on the heads of Paramount's Publx theatre chain: Adolfph Zukor, head of Paramount; Sam Katz, formerly with the Chicago Balaban & Katz theatre chain which was absorbed by Publix, Katz landing in the Paramount theatre arm as president of Publix; and E. V. Richards, formerly general manager of Saenger Theatres, Inc., landing the job of general manager of Publix theatres. |
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The Hattiesburg Saenger Theatre was another marker of a significant change in theatre-going & exhibition. The 1917 Saenger's Strand in New Orleans represented the beginning of movie palace presentation & broader public acceptance of moviegoing; the 1925 Saenger- Ehrlich Strand Theatre in New Orleans represented the general local theatrical shift from live shows to movies, & the 1929 Hattiesburg Saenger represented the end of live music and involved stage presentations attached to movies in large theatres. The theatre's design included facilities for stage presentations, an orchestra pit, a theatre organ, & facilities for the latest technical requirement of movie theatres, presentation of talking movies: acoustical design, construction materials to suit amplified sound & equipment for presenting both Movietone & Vitaphone talking picture formats. By opening day, movie theatre programs had so completely switched to films alone that the organ installation was not even completed, & the opening night program was touted as an "all-feature" program: talkie comedy short "The Fatal Forceps", a sing-along short film, & the Paramount talking picture "Sweetie". Emile Weil was ending his architectural business, & with his last theatre for the Saenger chain, he completed an array of work featuring all the most famous styles of the movie palace era: Adamesqe, eclectic, atmospheric, & finally with the Hattiesburg Saenger Theatre, Art Deco. Many operators of theaters that have elaborate decoration will refer to it as "art deco", but Art Deco was a specific style relying less on applied ornamentation than integrated design, emphasizing geometric forms & utilizing materials such as metal, glass, & ceramics. Weil's Saenger Theatre in Hattiesburg was Deco from the front facade's inset complex geometric design of tile & glass to the simplified, stylized interior pieces relying on neutral colors and sharp shapes to interact with colored lighting to produce eye-catching surfaces with shapes defined & set off by colored shadows & highlights. Emile Weil's Art Deco theatre had some of its decoration obscured through the years, but it could still be seen peeking out here & there. Over the years, the theatre lost the urn finials from its facade, and decorative borders in the auditorium were painted over. |
ABC Interstate Theatres donated the building in 1974 to the City of Hattiesburg, which planned to use the theatre as a performing arts center under the name of the Saenger Center. For a few years the theatre was unused, & the organ was sold. In 1978, the City of Hattiesburg began a modest renovation program, and the theatre was put back into condition for use as a performing arts center. Changes to the theatre at the time included structural repairs, simplification of the interior decoration scheme, conversion of storefront commercial areas to gallery space, & reinstallation of the original theatre organ. The theater was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in May of 1979. In 1999, the City of Hattiesburg closed the theatre & began an extensive renovation campaign. Reproductions of the original urn finials from the facade were created, along with a vertical sign similar to the original. The streetfront commercial spaces attached to the theatre were remodeled and integrated as additional lobby & restroom space. |
Other information:
Saenger Theatre, official website of the Saenger Theatre in Hattiesburg, MS | ||
Robert Morton organ in the Hattiesburg Saenger Center, a page showing the re-installation of the Hattiesburg Saenger's organ in 1978 |
Back to the Saenger Theatres | Next: the Majestic Theatre in Jackson, Mississippi |