Sedgwick Theater
Users vote for the films they want to see. It was built during a movie revolution with the advent of sync sound and would have seen silent films as well as talkies. This perhaps explains the theater s design including a stage for live performance, as well as its large single screen. The Sedgwick was designed to include a balcony but shortly before construction the balcony was removed from the plans (a balcony would likely have increased seating to 2000).The Oval lobby was a pivot point of the design, and the actual theater s footprint traveled back and to the left of the lot from that point. Airy neighborhood of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It was built in 1928 and designed by architect William Harold Lee.
At the time of writing this article the website for the Sedgwick Cultural Center no longer exists. The pricetag for a complete building restoration has been suggested to be 10 to 12 million US Dollars, which does not include the cost to create a business in the space which could truly make the Sedgwick self-sustaining. Today, the Sedgwick Theater is a community art space, with a gallery where the ticket booth once was. Only two in Philadelphia are open- The Ace Theater (Holiday Art Theater) and The Sedgwick Theater.
A stage was constructed in the Oval lobby, and performance has been in that space ever since. However, by 2006 despite having brought the Philadelphia community wonderful programming for ten years, little had changed to repair the Sedgwick Theater, and the Sedgwick Cultural Center separated from the Sedgwick Theater. Part of the proscenium arch is also still intact.
the men s room and women s room were on opposing ends of the lobby. The ceiling of the theater was left somewhat intact, and a beautiful Art Deco ceiling medalion still exists.
Entering the theater through five large archways, the rake of the seats dropped about 15 feet to the screen. The Sedgwick Theater opened in 1928 and remained in operation until 1966. A cinderblock wall was constructed closing off the theater space from the lobbies.
The theater building was split in two. The Sedgwick Theater is a historic American theater built in the Mt.
This led to a larger oval lobby where you could check your coats. However, it is little more than a garage there for the moment. When the building was purchased by David and Betty Ann Fellner, there had already been significant damage done to the building.
Each film has a plot summary and a streaming movie trailer (when available). This accounts for its amazing vaulted ceilings. When entering the theater, you would get your ticket at the ticket booth, into a rectangular lobby space.
And the inner lobbies are on occasion home to Films at the Sedgwick. To alleviate the risks of renting films to screen at the Sedgwick Theater, Films at the Sedgwick screened known public domain films and has created an interactive website for the community to take control of the programming to show. The theater was stripped of its seats and the rake, leaving a gutted box in the back.
They set up the Sedgwick Cultural Center, a not-for-profit organization in 1995. Those votes are tallied and once the film has received enough votes, that film is scheduled. Coordinates: 40°03′34″N 75°11′25″W / 40.05944°N 75.19028°W / 40.05944; -75.19028 .
Film Q Public, as it s called, is a list of films up for the community to consider screening. The Sedgwick Cultural Center s mission was to build community through the arts.
It is one of the remaining 20 Philadelphia theaters as of 2006 which he designed; nine have been demolished. Just outside Philadelphia, two more of Lee s theaters are seeing restorations: the Bryn Mawr and the Hiway Theater in Jenkintown. The Sedgwick Theater, located at 7137 Germantown Ave in Philadelphia, is designed in the 1920s style of a Art Deco Movie Palace.
When it closed in 1966, it was purchased for use as a warehouse.
