Hollywood Comes North
The community of North Hollywood was still a year away from being given that official name when a jewel box of a theatre called the "El Portal" opened in October of 1926.
The world was still a year away from "talkies," when the El Portal opened with a first run, silent melodrama starring Ralph Graves called Blarney, a now-lost film about an Irish prizefighter who immigrates to the United States and becomes involved with two New York girls.
The Spanish Renaissance Revival building by celebrated theatre architect Lewis A. Smith is now a mix of eras. Like so many Valley buildings, the El Portal was ravaged by the 1994 Northridge earthquake, but it was brought back to become what it is now — a grand community landmark instantly recognizable from the vivid neon Art Deco marquee. The luxurious carpeting was taken from the Shubert Theatre in Century City, home to 20th Century Fox studios. The bas relief artwork in the lobby dates from the 1930s. It is the handiwork of WPA artists, and illustrates moments in California history, from the Gold Rush to citrus harvests.
Meet The Beatles — Onscreen
Over the years, the 1400-seat theatre has been used for community fundraisers, "fright night" horror films and,
in the days before cable TV, showing films of championship boxing matches. In 1959, such actors as Karl Malden, Efrem Zimbalist Jr, Stephen Boyd and Jill St. John showed up at the El Portal for a benefit premiere of the movie Journey to the Center of the Earth.
In August 1964, more than a thousand excited teenagers lined up outside the El Portal to see the new Beatles movie, A Hard Day's Night. At the same time, about a dozen high school students began picketing nearby, carrying signs pleading for "Silence at Beatles Golden Performance," begging their fellow fans to quiet down once they got inside so everyone could hear the film and its music.
A Landmark Takes A Bow
A few years after the El Portal opened, a toddler named Donald O'Connor performed there in his family's vaudeville act. He would later make his way to Hollywood permanently, co-starring in Singin' in the Rain with Debbie Reynolds, a woman who, as a teenager, rode her bike to El Portal to catch movies.
In 1999, about 70 years after his first appearance at the El Portal, O'Connor returned to the renovated theatre to receive a lifetime achievement award from fellow stage and screen performer Carol Channing.
The refurbished theatre officially reopened a few months later, in January 2000. Within its walls are three theatres: the
95-seat Forum Theatre, the 42-seat Studio Theatre, and the 360-seat Main Stage, and the Judith Kaufman Art Gallery.
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