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  • Laura Axelrod is a writer and book reviewer. Her plays have been performed in California, New York and Europe.

    Her book reviews appear regularly in the Birmingham News and on the Newhouse News Service wire.

    Read more about Laura Axelrod.

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September 26, 2006

Restoring Birmingham's Lyric Theatre

(Laura's note: 4/7/07: Due to the popularity of this entry and pictures, I have to put this disclaimer. Please do not use my pictures without my permission. It is offically copyrighted material. Email me if you'd like to chat about it. Thanks.)


Also at the Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival, we watched a short documentary called “She’s a Lady”*. The film, which won for Best Alabama Documentary, traces the history of Birmingham’s Lyric Theatre, and efforts to restore it. The theatre opened in 1914. It was quite a hub of activity. Luminaries such as Mae West, Gene Autry, Roy Rogers and the Marx Brothers performed there. When the theatre closed in the late 70s, it was a porn house.

In conjunction with the film, Birmingham Landmarks Inc. decided to open the Lyric for one day so the public could see the theater for themselves. Here are some pictures of what the Lyric looks like right now.

Walking into the house of the Lyric, you have to be very careful where you step. If you left the designated area, the floor was so weak that you could fall through.

Stageview_4


This is the view from the stage. An historian was there to explain to us that the Lyric was one of the first theaters in Birmingham to allow Caucasians and African-Americans to sit in the same theater. Throughout the rest of the city, theaters were either "white" or "non-white". As was the custom back in the days of segregation, African-Americans were only allowed to sit in the two balconies.

Leftsideview_1


Stage Left - the "Box Seats"...

Sideview_1

Stage Right - more "Box Seats". A picture of the ceiling...

Ceiling_2

Chunks of ceiling fall at random times... The next shot is a picture of the fire curtain. According to the historian, the curtain prevented the audience from hearing the backstage area. However, the actors could frequently hear the audience loud and clear. The artwork is original - and faded.

Curtain_1

While other cities prefer to turn their historic theaters into parking lots, Birmingham respects its diverse - and at times, difficult history. And they certainly have a nice way of making a Yankee feel at home.

Comments

my grandfather, Harry Hayden Hawkins, painted the mural over the curtain in the Lyric Theatre....I am trying to find out info about him...do you know anything??? thanks, jane hoke

I don't. I'd recommend getting a hold of the people who own the theater.

This is for jane--whose grandfather is harry hayden hawkins. I work with the Alabama Theatre who owns the Lyric.I know that he was a student of a very well-known American artist John Singer Sargent.
Plans are to restore this mural.

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