- Source: Thomas W. Lamb
Thomas White Lamb (May 5, 1870 – February 26, 1942) was a Scottish-born, American architect. He was one of the foremost designers of theaters and cinemas of the 20th century.
Career
Born in Dundee, Scotland, United Kingdom, Thomas W. Lamb came to the United States at the age of 12. He studied architecture at Cooper Union in New York and initially worked for the City of New York as an inspector. His architecture firm, Thomas W. Lamb, Inc., was located at 36 West 40th Street in Manhattan, New York.
Lamb achieved recognition as one of the leading architects of the boom in movie theater construction of the 1910s and 1920s. Particularly associated with the Fox Theatres, Loew's Theatres and Keith-Albee chains of vaudeville and film theaters, Lamb was instrumental in establishing and developing the design and construction of the large, lavishly decorated theaters, known as "movie palaces", as showcases for the films of the emerging Hollywood studios.
As early as 1904, Lamb was credited with renovations for two existing theaters in the city: the Weber and Fields' Broadway Music Hall at 1215 Broadway, and the Dewey Theater on East 14th Street, the latter owned by Tammany Hall figure "Big Tim" Sullivan. His first complete theater design was the City Theatre, built on 14th Street in 1909 for film mogul William Fox. His designs for the 1914 Mark Strand Theatre, the 1916 Rialto Theatre and the 1917 Rivoli Theatre, all in Times Square, set the template for what would become the American movie palace.
Among his most notable theaters are the 1929 Fox Theatre in San Francisco and the 1919 Capitol Theatre in New York, both now demolished. Among his most noted designs that have been preserved and restored are the B.F. Keith Memorial Theatre in Boston (1928) (now the Boston Opera House), Warner's Hollywood Theatre (1930) in New York (now the Times Square Church), the Hippodrome Theatre (1914) in Baltimore, and the Loew's Ohio Theatre (1928) in Columbus, Ohio. Among Lamb's existing Canadian theaters are the Pantages Theatre in Toronto (1920) (now the Ed Mirvish Theatre). and Elgin and Winter Garden Theatres. The Cinema Treasures website, which documents the history of film theaters, lists 174 theaters designed by Lamb's company.
Aside from movie theaters, Lamb is noted for designing (with Joseph Urban) New York's Ziegfeld Theatre, a legitimate theater, as well as the third Madison Square Garden and the Paramount Hotel in midtown Manhattan.
Lamb died in 1942 in New York City at the age of 71. His architectural archive is held by the Drawings and Archives Department of Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library at Columbia University.
= John J. McNamara
=During the last ten years of his practice, Lamb's associate was the architect John J. McNamara. After Lamb's death, McNamara continued as an architect of theaters under his own name. McNamara was responsible for renovating some of Lamb's older New York theaters, and among his original designs was one for the 1969 Ziegfeld Theatre in Manhattan, which replaced Lamb's original building.
Selected theater designs
= United States
=Academy of Music, New York City, 1927
B.F. Keith Memorial Theatre, Boston, Massachusetts, 1928
Capitol Theatre, New York City, 1919
Capitol Theatre, Port Chester, New York, 1926
Cort (now James Earl Jones) Theatre, New York City, 1912
Embassy Theatre, New York City, 1925
Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre, New York City, 1912
Fenway Theatre, Boston, 1915
Fox Theatre, San Francisco, California, 1929
Franklin Square Theatre, Worcester, Massachusetts, 1927
Hippodrome Theatre, Baltimore, Maryland, 1914
Hippodrome, New York City, 1923 redesign
Keith-Albee Theatre, Flushing, Queens, New York, 1928
Keith-Albee Theatre, Huntington, West Virginia, 1928
Keith-Albee Palace Theatre, Columbus, Ohio, 1926
Keith-Albee Palace Theatre, Stamford, Connecticut, 1927
Lincoln Theatre, Miami Beach, Florida, 1936
Loew's 72nd Street Theatre, New York City, 1930
Loew’s Canal Theatre, 1926
Loew's 175th Street Theater, New York City, 1930
Loew's and United Artists' Ohio Theatre, Columbus, Ohio, 1928
Loew's Grand Theatre, Atlanta, Georgia, 1932 redesign
Loew's Midland Theatre, Kansas City, Missouri, 1927
Midway Theatre, Forest Hills, New York, 1942
Loew's Pitkin Theatre, Brooklyn, New York, 1928
Loew's State Theatre, Playhouse Square, Cleveland, Ohio, 1920
Loew's State Theatre (Now the TCC Roper Performing Arts Center), Norfolk, Virginia, 1926
Loew's State Theatre, Times Square, New York City, 1924
Newark Paramount Theatre, Downtown Newark, Newark, New Jersey, 1920s.
Loew's State Theatre, New Orleans, Louisiana, 1926
Loew's Theatre, New Rochelle, New York, 1925
Loew's State Theatre (Now the Landmark Theatre), Syracuse, New York, 1928
Madison Square Garden, New York City, 1925
Madison Theater, Albany, New York, 1929
Mark Hellinger Theatre (now Times Square Church), New York City, 1930
Mark Strand Theater, New York City, 1914
Maryland Theatre, Hagerstown, Maryland, 1915
Municipal Auditorium, Birmingham, Alabama, 1924
Ohio Theatre, Playhouse Square, Cleveland, Ohio, 1921
Orpheum Theatre, Boston, Massachusetts, 1915 redesign
Palace Theater, Waterbury, Connecticut, 1922
Poli's Majestic Theatre, Bridgeport, Connecticut, 1922
Poli's Palace Theatre, Bridgeport, Connecticut, 1922
Pythian Temple, Manhattan, 1927, the spacious theater the building once housed is gone; the facade remains.
Proctor's 58th Street Theatre, New York City, 1928
Proctor's 86th Street Theatre, New York City, 1927
Proctor's Theatre, Schenectady, New York, 1926
Reade's State Theatre, New Brunswick, New Jersey, 1921
Regent Theatre, New York City, 1913
Rialto Theatre, New York City, 1916
Ridgewood Theatre, Ridgewood, New York, 1916
Rivoli Theatre, New York City, 1917
Stanley Theatre, Utica, New York, 1928
State Theatre, Uniontown, Pennsylvania, 1922
Strand Theatre, Lakewood, New Jersey, 1922
Tivoli Theatre, Washington, DC, 1924
Victoria Theater, New York City, 1917
Warner Theatre, Torrington, Connecticut, 1931
Warner's Hollywood Theatre, New York City, 1930
Ziegfeld Theatre, New York City (with Joseph Urban), 1927
= Canada
=Elgin and Winter Garden Theatres, Toronto, 1913
The Sanderson Centre, Brantford, Ontario, 1919; auditorium restored in 1990, currently a performing arts centre
Capitol Theatre, Hamilton, Ontario, 1920; 103 King Street East, Hamilton all but lobby demolished in 1973; now vacant after Buttinsky's Bar and Wing Joint closed
Capitol Theatre (Windsor, Ontario), 1920; currently a performing arts centre.
Pantages Theatre, Toronto, Ontario, 1920
Uptown Theatre, Toronto, Ontario, 1920; demolished in 2003
= India
=Metro Cinema, Mumbai, Maharashtra, 1938
Metro Cinema, Kolkata (Calcutta), West Bengal, 1935; Currently being renovated.
Residential architecture
In 1920, Lamb designed for himself a private summer home in the Adirondacks in the village of Elizabethtown, New York. The house, which is still extant as a residence, is situated on the Boquet River. The eight-bedroom manor, referred to today as Cobble Mountain Lodge, is a shingle and cobble stone design marked by the inclusion of a stone turret.
References
External links
Cinema Treasures' List of theatres designed by Thomas W. Lamb.
Thomas W. Lamb works in the collection of the Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum
Gray, Christopher, Streetscapes: Thomas W. Lamb's Theaters, An Architect for Stage and Screen, Wired New York, October 5, 2008
Thomas W. Lamb Architecture on Google Maps
Thomas W. Lamb and John J. McNamara architectural records, 1895-1989, held by the Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library, Columbia University
Lamb, Thomas W. fonds (R12543) at Library and Archives Canada
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Loew's State Theatre (New York City)
- Madison Square Garden (1925)
- Prabowo Subianto
- Teori dependensi konseptual
- Penyebab Perang Dunia II
- Sejarah sosialisme
- Teorema empat warna
- Hidup yang tak teruji tak layak dijalani
- Edward W. Morley
- Medali Priestley
- Thomas W. Lamb
- Thomas Lamb
- Audubon Ballroom
- Elgin and Winter Garden Theatres
- Newark Paramount Theatre
- Uptown Theatre (Toronto)
- State Theatre (New Brunswick, New Jersey)
- Lamb (surname)
- Palladium (New York City)
- Palace Theatre (Columbus, Ohio)