City February 22, 2012 12:00 PM

Wrecking Buffalo: The Marlowe Theater

Wrecking Buffalo: The Marlowe Theater

This story originally appeared on Views of Buffalo

The Marlowe Theater at 257 Virginia was originally built as a modest movie house in 1915 by John R. Oshei, the same man who founded the Trico Corporation. Oshei owned and built a number of other theaters throughout Buffalo including the Teck Theater which was located in the 700 block of Main Street in downtown Buffalo. The theater was named after one of Oshei's favorite actresses, Julia Marlowe.

In 1929 the Marlowe changed hands and was purchased by Matthew M. Konczakowski who used the Marlowe as his base of operations for the handful of other theaters he owned. He spent $70,000 dollars on a complete overhaul in 1941 including doubling the original size, air-conditioning, and the addition of a modern façade, which is how the building appears today.

The improvements lengthened the building 40 feet, increased to 7056 square feet, and sat a grand total of 998 people. An article from the Buffalo Evening News published January 22nd 1941 described the remodeled theater in great detail:

"Air conditioning and indirect lighting from a circular ceiling dome which radiates all the colors of the rainbow have been installed. Acoustical plaster covers the ceiling. The walls trimmed in peach, blue, brown, and green, are overlaid with special insulation and acoustical board. Aquamarine and dubonnet -tinted draperies reflecting the color scheme throughout set off the auditorium. A marble lobby is appointed with mirrors from the floor to the top. Restrooms and sitting rooms are finished in tile. Guest rooms, 18 feet wide and 12 feet deep have been added to an upper "balcony" flanking an enlarged projection room...The front façade, modernistic in design, is colored in brown, heather, and buff. Brick and litholite exterior walls have been replaced with terra-vitra tile."

257 Virginia V.jpg

The last five decades have not been kind to the Marlowe and when Konczakowski died the theater closed shortly after. After the theater operation ended it changed hands multiple times, being used as a church by various organizations. In 1979 there was feasibility study conducted by the Community Planning Association Center of WNY to possibly renovate the building for a mini-convention center for Hispanic cultural and social activities, but nothing happened.

Wrecking equipment is already waiting around the building for a controlled demolition that will take place between this week and the first weeks of March. Although currently property records do not reflect change in ownership, Hispanics United across the street recently purchased it from Prince of Peace Church, which vacated the Marlowe in 2007 and moved to a church at 190 Albany Street. Hispanics United considered reuse, but unfortunately with half a century of deferred maintenance the costs were apparently too great. A three story, residential building is slated to take its place.

There will be no encore for the Marlowe and it's once proud marquee will never again light up the neighborhood, inviting residents to take in a show.

A special thanks to David Torke of fixbuffalo who mapped the most recent batch of city demolitions, which includes the Marlowe and can be seen here.

Marlowe.jpgThe Marlowe as she appeared in 1979. Image courtesy of the Buffalo Evening News, 10-17-79

Marlowe II.jpg

The photo in the lower right corner is how the Marlowe looked originally before the 1941 modifications. 

Image courtesy of the Buffalo Evening News, 11-22-20


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Drove by this this morning. Never knew what it was but what a shame.

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Thank for keeping history alive, Mike! What wonderful assets neighborhood movie houses are and were....

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Although a shame we could'nt save this, it is refreshing to know that once it's gone, a replacement of an actual building will take it's place. Better to have the site re-used then left as another empty field.

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what are the apartment building designs?

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Was just thinking that. Any more details on this new building?

replied to 300miles
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Ok, so I have to ask. Who is building the 3 story structure that is replacing this, and what does it look like?

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Every time I think there's not much else to know about Buffalo something like this pops up. Thanks Mike

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Too bad about the theater. The good news is there is something planned to be built in its place.

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Thanks for the great article, Mike!

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Based on the latest pictures I have seen this one is gone now.

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I have walked by it often and had no inkling of its primetime life.

There may be a need for a special flag that can be flown at quarter-mast, in memory of a historic building's passing (i.e. demolition) in Buffalo.

Thanks for the info!

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You would never see that flag at full mast!

replied to BuffaloQPublic
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Agree. Drove past the building every workday for about 10 years...had no clue.

replied to BuffaloQPublic
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The Allendale had a pipe organ? That's much more interesting than this old dump being wrecked.

PS - STILL, this site is flooded with spam, every single night. Youse Guys are failing.

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The Allendale had a Beman organ, made in Binghamton NY.

replied to MrGreenJeans
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About all the comments from people saying how many times they have been past that building and didn't know what it had been: I had the same experience for months, before finding out it had been a theater.

I believe strongly that if the building had been fortunate enough to retain much of its art-deco facade, it probably wouldn't be on its way to the landfill now. It's crucial to the preservation of buildings that we keep them from being stripped of their architectural uniqueness. Even if a building has to languish in a mothballed state for years, if it retains something of its past grandeur people will at least keep their eye on it, and in many cases someone will be so taken with it that they'll find a way to both preserve and reuse it.

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Very sad. There are so many new theatre companies popping up in Buffalo every year. This would have been an ideal location for one of them if the building had just been maintained. It breaks my heart to lose these staples of Buffalo all becasue the City doesn't give a crap about making owners take care of their property. That's funny considering what was discussed at the last common council meeting. What a shame.

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So...instead of applauding the construction of safe and efficient new residential housing in a depressed area of town, you're all bitching about the demolition of an albatross so far gone that it would require millions in restoration funds?

Insane.

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Yes, because there is no reason why this building had to deteriorate so much in the first place, and second, because you can have the building AND still have quality residential building as well.

replied to Captain Picard
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I heard that the new development will be a mixed-use building by HUB- I know there are plans to incorporate a senior center and residential rental units, but I'm not 100% on the layout. I do know mixed-use, not solely residential, is the plan.

I think it's a beneficial plan for the neighborhood and the best case replacement for a really cool theater that could not be saved.

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I live just a block away... i saw this happening as I waited for the 3 :( guess I'll have to watch the slow destruction as my morning view on the way to ECC for a few weeks... Makes me sad, I really saw potential here. Wish I was rich!

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Drove by yesterday and the demolition was in progress. This one had deteriorated to a point where it probably was not feasible to save. The west wall had extensive water damage caused by years of neglect and would have needed to be completely reconstructed.

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It's a shame to see this one go. In a different world this could have been part of a vibrant downtown cultural scene. Too bad a reliable architectural time machine is still a few years off. So it goes.

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