|
DECEMBER
20, 1928
The
theatre stood empty and virtually unused for two decades. But for fifty years,
The Midland was alive … alive with the sounds of
laughter, music, applause, sobs, even a blood-curdling scream of fright every
now and again – all the sounds of people enjoying an evening of entertainment,
surrounded in the magnificence and opulence that the movie palaces of the early
twentieth century were known for.
On
December 20, 1928, just a few days before Christmas, the sidewalks of the Newark,
Ohio Town Square were filled with shoppers in search of last-minute gifts. Amidst all the hustle and bustle, on North Park Place there was a line of
people – hundreds of them – people standing in place for hours, or, according
to an account in the local paper, paying young boys to stand there for them.
They braved the elements so that they could be the first to get a glimpse of
Newark’s newest entertainment establishment.
Finally,
at 6:30 PM, the doors opened, and the excited throng filed inside. A half hour later, the Mammoth Moller organ rose from the floor, and
house organist Helen D. Longfellow joined the orchestra in a stirring rendition
of “The Star-Spangled Banner”. The
silver curtain opened, revealing a suspended American flag. Newark Mayor Robbins Hunter welcomed everyone, and then the show at long
last was underway. The opening was
a hit! The paper said that a "splendid program was arranged." It began with
a "colored art film, showing the American Indian and many scenic spots in the
West." Two vaudeville acts were followed by "The Shopworn Angel" starring
up-and-coming actor Gary Cooper. One of the Vaudeville acts was the Columbia Quartet, which the
review called…"four boys who sing a lot and chatter a bit. The
voices are well-harmonized and they took several encores." The review of
Cooper’s performance was less flattering: "Gary Cooper is not the dominate
lad he usually is…."
(By
the way, the
movies on December 20 were silents, but only a week later, the theater played a
talking picture called “Manhattan Cocktail” – the first time a sound movie
played in Newark!)
But
the action on stage and screen was only half the show. What the first-nighters
really wanted to see was the magnificent Midland interior...and on this score,
they are not disappointed. Passing through the lobby and foyer, the customers
marveled at the marble pillars and atmospheric design of the ceiling. Once
seated in plush upholstered chairs, they took in the unique Spanish
architecture. Everywhere you looked, there was velvet – red velvet
carpeting, walls draped with rose velvet and gold fringe, velvet rails on the
stairways and orchestra pit. Even the balcony was trimmed with lace. And
suspended from the ceiling, a beautiful art glass chandelier. This was the
setting in which audiences on the evening of December 20, 1928 – and thousands
of audiences on thousands of evenings thereafter – experienced The Midland’s
many offerings.
THE
FIRST GOLDEN ERA
|