Amazon.com Review
Theaters are more than just buildings, more than giant musical instruments, as some have described them. For regular theatergoers, they're old friends. When a theater disappears, there's a palpable sense of mourning. Updated to 1997,
Lost Broadway Theatres recalls, in photos and memories, playhouses from the colossal and opulent American Theatre, now a parking lot, to the cozy Punch and Judy, now the site of an office building. The good news is that several of the houses previously considered doomed but not yet demolished have been restored in the Times Square boom.
Lost Broadway Theatres celebrates their return, and pleads on behalf of other hidden beauties whose fate may not yet be sealed.
Review
"If there was one thing worth saving from the old Times Square, it was the majestic old theatres that dotted the area, and now they are preserved in Lost Broadway Theatres by Nicholas Van Hoogstraten, an Emmy-winning TV producer who created the book from his own love of the theatre, as a veteran of over 30 musicals and plays. Updated to include the restoration work of the 1990's, this oversized book has over 300 period and contemporary photographs, drawings, and plans, and traces of the history of nearly 60 Broadway theatres built from 1882 to 1932. --
Manhattan"Nicholas van Hoogstraten takes a look in
Lost Broadway Theatres at the buildings, people, and stories that turned a mile of midtown Manhattan into the Great White Way. Along with photographs of the exteriors and interiors of each theater, this updated and expanded edition of a 1991 book offers architectural drawings and lists of the major plays and players. Van Hoogstraten, a television producer, tells marvelous anecdotes that set the imagination spinning...." --
Betsy von Furstenberg, New York Times Book Review, Nov 30 1997
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