Gayety Theater
The Gayety Theatre was located at 103 Washington Ave. No. in Minneapolis. The site was originally built in 1886 as the Windsor House Hotel. The theater was built in 1909 but no demolition is noted, so it may have been a remodel of the hotel?
Bryan Krefft of Cinema Treasures.org provides the following information.
The Gayety Theatre was opened by Herman Faehr in 1909, originally as a legitimate house, and could seat just over 1,200. It was designed in Neo-Classical style, and its proscenium arch rose seventy feet above its stage. The facade, which featured a pediment held up by a quartet of Corinthian pillars, was of gleaming white terra-cotta.
By the mid-teens, the theater had switched to vaudeville and burlesque acts. During the 1920’s, among the famous names to play the Gayety Theatre included Al Jolson, Fanny Brice, and Sophie Tucker.
One notable burlesque act at the Gayety was Carrie Finnell, seen below, early in her career. Carrie may not look like much, but by all accounts had the ability to spin her tassels without moving her body. How that translated to radio, I don’t know.
The city of Minneapolis closed down the theater in 1928, after it decided the burlesque acts at the Gayety Theatre were becoming too racy. It was only after its management promised to stage musical comedy acts onstage rather than burlesque that the theater was allowed to reopen the next year.
In 1941, after nearly four decades of live entertainment, the Gayety Theatre finally turned to movies, as a double-feature house. In late-1941, the theater’s name was changed to the Floyd B. Olson Theatre, named after our Governor who died in 1936. However, when Olson’s widow learned her husband’s name was now on the marquee of the former burlesque theater, she sued the theater, which immediately switched the name back to the Gayety Theatre, and Mrs. Olson dropped her suit.
In the mid-1940s, the theater closed again, this time permanently. In 1945, plans were drawn up to convert the Gayety Theatre into a nightclub, but fell through.
Then, in 1970, after sitting vacant for decades, it was announced that legitimate theater would be returning to a restored Gayety Theatre, but once again, nothing came to fruition. The theater was razed by 1980.
In 2019, 101 Washington Ave. No. is shown as vacant land.