Helen Hayes Theatre, a legitimate Broadway theatre located at 240 West 44th Street in midtown-Manhattan. The Helen Hayes Theatre was designed by the architect Harry Creighton Ingalls of the firm Ingalls & Hoffman, and built by Winthrop Ames. When it first opened, it was known as the Little Theatre, owing both to the theatre's small size (with a seating capacity of only 300), and also because the theatre's goal was to create small, intimate productions. In the 1920s, Herbert J. Krapp redesigned the theatre to increase its seating capacity to 590 and improve its acoustics. | |
The theatre opened on March 12, 1912 with John Galsworthy's play The Pigeon. In 1931, the building was sold to the New York Times and converted into a conference hall renamed New York Times Hall. CBS used the theatre as a radio facility for a time, but it was reconverted by ABC into a legitimate theatre in 1958, once again as the Little Theatre. Dick Clark's Saturday night The Dick Clark Show originated from there from February 1958 through September 1961. During this time, ABC also broadcast the daytime hit Who Do You Trust with Johnny Carson from the theatre. It was briefly renamed the Winthrop Ames Theatre in 1964. From 1965 through 1983 it was again the Little Theatre. During the first half of that period, Westinghouse Broadcasting taped the popular, syndicated Merv Griffin Show at the theatre. The theatre was finally renamed for Helen Hayes in 1983 when the renowned actress's existing namesake theatre located on West 46th Street was demolished, along with the Morosco Theatre and the Bijou Theatre, in order to construct the New York Marriott Marquis. Hayes, known as the "First Lady of the American Theater," was still living at the time, and because of the unusual and embarrassing nature of her having outlived her monument, it was decided to rechristen the Little Theatre in her honor. When not being used as a theatrical venue, the building also has been leased to CBS Radio and the Westinghouse Corporation. Notable productions 1964: The Subject Was Roses |
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