Palais Theatre

Palais Theatre
Palais Pictures
Palais Theatre in January 2018
Address Lower Esplanade St Kilda
Melbourne
Australia
Coordinates 37°52′02″S 144°58′34″E / 37.8673544°S 144.9761559°E / -37.8673544; 144.9761559
Designation Victorian Heritage Register
Type Live Music, Theatre, Ballet, Film
Capacity 2,896 on 2 levels
Construction
Opened 11 November 1927[1]
Architect Henry E. White
Website
Palais Theatre

The Palais Theatre is a concert venue, theatre and cinema, located in the Melbourne inner beachside suburb of St Kilda. With a capacity of 2,896 people, it is the largest seated theatre in Australia.

Built in 1927, it is one of the few early 20th century picture palaces to survive in Australia, and is included on the Victorian Heritage Register. It is a major local landmark, and an important part of the early 20th century development of the St Kilda beach foreshore as an entertainment precinct.

History

The Palais Theatre was originally owned by the Phillips brothers (Leon, Herman and Harold) from Spokane, Washington who had previously been associated with fellow American showman James Dixon Williams, with whom they established Luna Park on the adjacent site in 1912.[2] Williams left the partnership and returned to the United States in about 1913, leaving the Phillips brothers to expand their entertainment business.

The Phillips' next ventures were a series of dance halls and picture theatres on the site across a small road from Luna Park. They began in 1913 with the first Palais de Danse, on the site of the current Palais Theatre. In 1915, this building was converted into the Palais Pictures. In 1919, an arched truss steel-framed structure that was to be a new Palais Pictures was built over the old Palais, which was then dismantled and relocated next door, to the north, becoming a dance hall again, the twin towered arched roofed Palais de Danse.[3] In 1922 the interior of Palais De Danse was remodelled to a design by the architect Walter Burley Griffin. In 1925, Griffin was again employed to design a substantial remodelling of the Palais Pictures next door; work was nearly complete in 1926 when a fire destroyed the whole building.[4] The Philips brothers then commissioned a new architect, theatre specialist Henry E. White, to build a larger, grander theatre.

This new theatre, with the largest seating capacity outside the main central city theatres, was officially opened by the Mayor of St Kilda on 12 November 1927. The next night the first films screened were "Across the Pacific", starring Monte Blue, and "Rough House Rosie", starring Clara Bow, with interval entertainment provided by Harry Jacobs and his orchestra.[5]

When the last of the Phillips brothers died in 1957, the Palais, the Palais de Danse and Luna Park were sold to local entrepreneurs. A brass plaque, still in place on the second level of the Palais, bears a tribute to Leon Phillips from members of the American community of Victoria. The theatre, which had operated primarily as a cinema until the 1950s, became increasingly popular as a live performance venue, hosting top overseas stars such as Johnnie Ray, Bob Hope, the Rolling Stones, Tom Jones and many others. At some point in the 1950s, the name was changed from Palais Pictures to Palais Theatre, reflecting its new role, and the neon sign on the front was changed accordingly.

In the 1960s and 70s, the Palais hosted live acts, films, and opera and ballet. The Bolshoi Theatre, the Kirov Ballet, and Stars of World Ballet performed, and it was the Melbourne venue for The Australian Ballet,[6], who premiered Anne Woolliams' production of Swan Lake on 19 October 1977,[7] and its first commissioned Nutcracker choreographed by Leonid Kozlov and Valentina Kozlova on 8 October 1982.[8]. The Melbourne Film Festival was based at the Palais from 1962 until 1982.[9] Jesus Christ Superstar played at the Palais in 1973 and 1976, and Joan Sutherland appeared with the Australian Opera in The Merry Widow in 1979.[10]

In 1974/5, a Warner Brothers movie, A Film about Jimi Hendrix, had its Australian premiere at the Palais by special arrangement with the Paul Dainty Corporation. This was also the first time that a 1,000 watt sound system was used at a cinema screening in Australia.

In the mid 2000s, the City of Port Phillip, managers of the land, proposed a large scale redevelopment of the St Kilda 'Triangle', the site including the Palais and the adjacent car park. The lease of the site and building, which was nearing its end, was not renewed with the then lessee,[11] who controversially removed a number of items, notably the spanish style lobby chandelier.[12] After various court cases, it was determined that their ownership by the former lessee was valid, and they remain in storage as of 2017.

Between 2007 and 2016 the venue was managed by Palais Theatre Management Pty Ltd, a body set up by the local City of Port Phillip. In 2016 a new 30 year lease was granted to Live Nation [13], and the Premier of Victoria Daniel Andrews announced a $20 million restoration.[14] The renovated theatre, repainted in its original sand colour after decades as off-white, reopened in May 2017.[15]

Architecture

Typical of 1920s picture theatres, the architectural style is ornate, eclectic and exotic. The arched roof and twin domed towers of the facade is an arrangement shared by other entertainment buildings in the foreshore area, notably Luna Park next door, the St Kilda Sea Baths, and long demolished landmarks like the Palais de Danse to the north, and the St. Moritz Ice Rink on the Upper Esplanade.

The architect Henry White stated that he adopted no particular style in the design of the Palais Pictures building, and the interior has been described at times as Spanish, French, Oriental and Italian.[16]

The exterior does features Spanish Baroque detailing on top of the towers, while the interior is broadly Neoclassical with tall columns and pilasters and a shallow dome in the auditorium, with elaborate textured plaster surfaces and detailing in the Adam style, and extensive concealed lighting.

References

  1. "PALAIS PICTURES". The Argus. Melbourne. 12 November 1927. p. 31 via National Library of Australia.
  2. Peterson, Richard. "Palais Theatre". A Place of Sensuous Resort. St Kilda Historical Society. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  3. Peterson, Richard. "Palais Theatre". A Place of Sensuous Resort. St Kilda Historical Society. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  4. "Picture Theatre on Fire: Palais Pictures destroyed". The Argus. 11 February 1926. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  5. "St Kilda's New Theatre: Palais Pictures Opened". The Age. 12 November 1927. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  6. History & Archives, Palais Theatre Official Site – accessed 3 May 2009
  7. Swan Lake, AustraliaDancing.org – accessed 3 May 2009
  8. Nutcracker, AustraliaDancing.org – accessed 3 May 2009
  9. "Floodlit exterior of the Palais Theatre during the 14th Melbourne International Film Festival, 1965". Culture Victoria. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
  10. "Palais Theatre". Encyclopedia of Melbourne. School of Historical & Philosophical Studies, The University of Melbourne. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
  11. "Tenants refuse to vanish from St Kilda triangle". The Age. 7 July 2005. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  12. "Battle to throw light on missing chandelier". The Age. 11 July 2007. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  13. , - accessed 11 July 2016
  14. Saving The Palais, - accessed 5 May 2016
  15. "Palais Theatre in St Kilda reopens its famous doors after $26 million revamp". ABC news. 16 May 2017. Retrieved 17 October 2017.
  16. "PALAIS THEATRE". Victorian Heritage Database. Retrieved 18 March 2018.
  • Short film by Culture Victoria, a Victorian State Government historic collection portal, can be found here, or on youtube here.
  • Phillips brothers biography: , by Bruce Corneil


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