Rialto

Defunct

Address

Rialto Theatre, 1481 Broadway

GPS

40.756274113625, -73.987012955701

BOOK

Broadway was a riot of light, thronged as he had never seen it with a carnival crowd which swept its glittering way through scraps of paper, piled ankle-deep on the sidewalks. Here and there, elevated upon benches and boxes, soldiers addressed the heedless mass, each face in which was clear cut and distinct under the white glare overhead. Anthony picked out half a dozen figures—a drunken sailor, tipped backward and supported by two other gobs, was waving his hat and emitting a wild series of roars; a wounded soldier, crutch in hand, was borne along in an eddy on the shoulders of some shrieking civilians; a dark-haired girl sat cross-legged and meditative on top of a parked taxicab. Here surely the victory had come in time, the climax had been scheduled with the uttermost celestial foresight. The great rich nation had made triumphant war, suffered enough for poignancy but not enough for bitterness—hence the carnival, the feasting, the triumph. Under these bright lights glittered the faces of peoples whose glory had long since passed away, whose very civilizations were dead—men whose ancestors had heard the news of victory in Babylon, in Nineveh, in Bagdad, in Tyre, a hundred generations before; men whose ancestors had seen a flower-decked, slave-adorned cortege drift with its wake of captives down the avenues of Imperial Rome….
Past the Rialto, the glittering front of the Astor, the jewelled magnificence of Times Square … a gorgeous alley of incandescence ahead….

The Beautiful and Damned

HISTORICAL BACKGROUND

Opened on 21 April 1916 as a grand movie palace, with 1,960 seats and a design by Rosario Candela. In the 1920s it was one of Broadway’s most important cinemas: from 1919 it hosted Paramount premieres. After the building was sold in 1935, it was demolished and rebuilt on a smaller scale, with the rest of the property reserved for shops and offices. In the 1970s it shifted toward adult cinema, and in the 1980s it presented theatre. Finally, in 1998, it was demolished and replaced by an office skyscraper.

OTHER LOCATIONS