Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Some of Saenger’s glamour still glinting

- This article is among features at ExplorePin­eBluff.com, a program of the Pine Bluff Advertisin­g and Promotion Commission. Sources: Abandoned Arkansas, Encycloped­ia of Arkansas.

Even in its state of disrepair, hints of The Saenger Theatre’s original grandeur and architectu­ral significan­ce shine through. Opened on Nov. 17, 1924, The Saenger Theatre was called “The Showplace of the South.”

The Saenger Theatre wasn’t a one-off. It was part of a 300-theater chain that the Saenger brothers built in the South during the 1920s. The theater in Pine Bluff is one of just a few Saenger movie palaces still standing.

It all started in 1912 with a man named O.C. Hauber who converted an old store building he owned into the Hauber Theater. The Hauber changed hands twice before becoming The Saenger, and this original structure burned to the ground when a lit candle had an unfortunat­e encounter with an open gas line.

The Saenger was rebuilt by architect Emile Weil, who constructe­d many other Saenger Theatres in the Southeast. At a cost of almost $200,000, an astronomic­al sum for the time, The Saenger Theatre was a Classical Revival brick building with an ornate interior featuring 1,500 seats on the lower floor and the balcony, marble floors, a crystal and prism chandelier, and a fullsized Broadway stage.

The initial opening of the magnificen­tly rebuilt Saenger was a hotly anticipate­d event throughout southeast Arkansas. The theater’s week-long grand opening set attendance records and stars like Gloria Swanson, Norma Talmadge and producer D.W. Griffith were a part of the festivitie­s.

Audiences regularly filled the theater’s 1,600 seats to watch

performanc­es by Harry Houdini, Will Rogers and John Philip Sousa, as well as Roy Rogers and his horse, Trigger. Al G. Fields Minstrels, Ziegfeld Follies, and other traveling theatrical groups performed at The Saenger Theatre, as well.

There were children’s shows on Saturdays, with the price of admission being an empty Coke bottle. School plays, high school graduation­s, and dance recitals were also held there. During the Jim Crow era, white patrons sat in front of the balcony, while African Americans entered by the side door, which led to the very top of the balcony.

What led to the long decline and eventual closure of The Saenger? Blame it on demographi­cs. Sparkling new multiplex theaters in shopping centers on the outskirts of town lured people away from downtowns across the country. The loss hit Pine Bluff especially hard.

As The Saenger sunk deeper into disrepair, a succession of nonprofit groups attempted to save it. In 1980, ownership transferre­d to a group called Heckatoo Heritage, and in 1996, about a year after the theater was listed on the National Register of Historic Places, ownership was transferre­d to Friends of The Saenger, now known as Old Towne Centre Theatres Inc. This group made substantia­l renovation­s, including a new roof and many improvemen­ts to the interior, but it was a drop in the bucket compared with what was needed.

In January 2012, Old Towne Centre Theatres Inc. donated The Saenger Theatre to the City of Pine Bluff. The 2012 budget allocated $15,000 of city funds (although not tax money) for repairs to the structure, especially on its leaking roof. A 2013 grant from the Arkansas Historic Preservati­on Program aided in paying for repairs to the roof.

These repairs were only a fraction of what was needed, so it will probably be a while before The Saenger is ready to host its next performanc­e. In the meantime, the next time you’re in downtown Pine Bluff, why not pause to pay homage to The Saenger Theatre and its place in Pine Bluff history? Maybe someday soon it will be restored to its former glory.

 ?? (Special to The Commercial) ?? From the 1920s through the 1960s, The Saenger Theatre drew large crowds of people to see the top acts of the day. More photos at arkansason­line.com/1123saenge­r/.
(Special to The Commercial) From the 1920s through the 1960s, The Saenger Theatre drew large crowds of people to see the top acts of the day. More photos at arkansason­line.com/1123saenge­r/.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States