1910 Nickelodeon / Photo Credit: William James - City of Toronto Archives - Fonds 1244
WHAT IS A NICKELODEON MOVIE
THEATER? (In the Entertainment industry.)
What is a nickelodeon movie theater?
The nickelodeon was the first type of indoor
exhibition space dedicated to showing projected motion pictures. Usually set up
in converted storefronts, these small, simple theaters charged five cents for
admission and flourished from about 1905 to 1915.
"Nickelodeon" was concocted from nickel,
the name of the U.S. five-cent coin, and the ancient Greek word Odéon, a
roofed-over theater, the latter indirectly by way of the Odéon in Paris,
emblematic of a very large and luxurious theater, much as Ritz was of a grand
hotel. For unknown reasons, in 1949 the lyricist of a popular song "Music!
Music! Music!" incorporated the refrain "Put another nickel in, in
the nickelodeon…” evidently referring to either a jukebox or a mechanical
musical instrument such as a coin-operated player piano or orchestra. The
meaning of the word has been muddied ever since. In fact, when it was current
in the early 20th century, it was used only to refer to a small five-cent
theater and not to any coin-in-the-slot machine, including amusement arcade
motion-picture viewers such as the Kinetoscope and Mutoscope.[improper
synthesis?]
The earliest films had been shown in "peep
show" machines or projected in vaudeville theaters as one of the otherwise
live acts. Nickelodeons drastically altered film exhibition practices and the
leisure-time habits of a large segment of the American public. Although they
were characterized by continuous performances of a selection of short films,
added attractions such as illustrated songs were sometimes an important
feature. Regarded as disreputable and dangerous by some civic groups and
municipal agencies, crude, ill-ventilated nickelodeons with hard wooden seats
were outmoded as longer films became common and larger, more comfortably
furnished motion-picture theaters were built, a trend that culminated in the
lavish "movie palaces" of the 1920s.
Film historian Charles Musser wrote: "It is not
too much to say that modern cinema began with the nickelodeons."
History
The name "Nickelodeon" was first used in 1888
by Colonel William Austin for his Austin's Nickelodeon, a dime museum located
in Boston, Massachusetts. The term was popularized by Harry Davis and John P.
Harris, who opened a small storefront theater with the name on Smithfield
Street in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on June 19, 1905. Although it was not the
first theater to show films, in 1919 a news article stated that it was the
first theater in the world "devoted exclusively to exhibition of moving
picture spectacles". Davis and Harris found such great success with their
operation that their concept of a five-cent theater showing movies continuously
was soon imitated by hundreds of ambitious entrepreneurs, as was the name of
the theater itself. Statistics at the time show that the number of nickelodeons
in the United States doubled between 1907 and 1908 to around 8000, and it was
estimated that by 1910 as many as 26 million Americans visited these theaters
weekly. Nickelodeons that were in converted storefronts typically seated fewer
than 200 – the patrons often sat on hard wooden chairs, with the screen hung on
the back wall. A piano (and maybe a drum set) would be placed to the side of,
or below the screen. Larger nickelodeons sometimes had the capacity for well
over 1000 people. Louis B. Mayer came of age just as the popularity of the
nickelodeon was beginning to rise; he renovated the Gem Theater in Haverhill,
Massachusetts, converting it into a nickelodeon, which he opened in 1907 as the
Orpheum Theater, announcing that it would be "the home of refined
entertainment devoted to Miles Brothers moving pictures and illustrated
songs". Other well-known nickelodeon owners were the Skouras Brothers of
St. Louis.
Changes in film distribution and exhibition
Nickelodeons radically altered the mode of
representation that corresponded with changes in the modes of distribution and
the types of films being made. Around 1903, longer multi-shot films became more
prevalent, and this shift brought about important innovations in the
distribution of films with the establishment of "film exchanges".
Film exchanges would buy films from manufacturers and then rent them out to
exhibitors. With a steady supply of different films, exhibitors finally had the
possibility to open venues where films were the central attraction. They did
not have to worry about finding new audiences because the same audience would
return again and again to watch different films. Exhibition practices greatly
varied and programs lasted anywhere from ten minutes to an hour and a half or
more in length. Often, programs ran continuously and patrons would join a
program already in progress when they arrived and stay as long as they liked.
While some nickelodeons only showed films, others offered shows that combined
films with vaudeville acts or illustrated songs.
The desirability of longer films, which enabled
nickelodeons to grow the way they did, was the result of a number of factors;
economic competition between film production companies put pressure on them to
create more elaborate, and often longer, films, to differentiate one film from
another. Longer films were also more attractive, as the price paid by
exhibitors depended on a film's length and the longer a film, the more profit
there was to be made. Some exhibitors found longer films more desirable since
it made programming easier, faster, and possibly cheaper, as they no longer had
to organize their own programs by editing together a variety of short films.
Directors had a great desire to make longer films because it meant greater
artistic innovation as they tried to find new ways to engage audiences. The
popularity of longer films also meant an increase in production of fictional
films as actualities decreased. One of the possible reasons for this shift is
that fiction films were often easier to plan and cheaper to film than
actualities which were subject to various location-related difficulties.
Fiction films, quickly became standardized, and the popularity of longer films
meant they outperformed actualities, which were usually short.
Audience
Early writers on American cinema history assumed that
audiences at nickelodeons were primarily working-class people who could not afford
a higher ticket price. More recent historians argue the rise of the middle
class audiences throughout the nickelodeon era and into the later 1910s belief
to expand the business. At the heart of the image of nickelodeons in
traditional histories is the belief that movies were a simple amusement for the
working class, and that the middle-class stayed away until after World War I.
This idea is reflected in Lewis Jacobs' 1939 survey, where he writes:
"concentrated largely in poorer shopping districts and slum neighborhoods,
nickelodeons were disdained by the well-to-do. But, the workmen and their
families who patronized the movies did not mind the crowded, unsanitary, and
hazardous accommodations most of the nickelodeons offered." In recent
studies, Robert C. Allen debated whether movies attracted a middle-class
audience as illustrated by the location of earlier movie theaters in
traditional entertainment districts. Allen writes; "in terms of social
class, more nickelodeons were located in or near middle-class neighborhoods
than in the Lower East Side ghetto."
Manhattan nickelodeons
The nickelodeon boom in Manhattan between 1905 and
1907 has often functioned as historical shorthand for the rise of the movies in
general. Ben Singer writes in his analysis of Manhattan nickelodeons; "for
most people ... the image of cramped, dingy nickelodeons in Manhattan's Lower
East Side ghetto stands as a symbol for the cinema's emergence in
America." Nickelodeons consistently appeared in the densest areas of the
city in terms of residential concentration and the amount of pedestrian
traffic. Areas such as Union Square, Herald Square, 23rd Street, and 125th
Street were typical locations and the larger movie theaters were set up there.
Neighborhood nickelodeons, which were the majority of movie theaters in
Manhattan, were almost always located in neighborhoods with high residential
densities and spread over a substantial number of blocks.
Types of nickelodeon programs
Nickelodeons usually showed films about ten to
fifteen minutes in length, and in a variety of styles and subjects, such as
short narratives, "scenics" (views of the world from moving trains),
"actualities" (precursors of later documentary films), illustrated
songs, local or touring song and dance acts, comedies, melodramas, problem
plays, stop action sequences, sporting events and other features which allowed
them to compete with vaudeville houses.
Decline
Though strong throughout the years from 1905 to 1913,
nickelodeons became victims of their own success as attendance grew rapidly,
necessitating larger auditoriums. Nickelodeons further declined with the advent
of the feature film, and as cities grew and industry consolidation led to
larger, more comfortable, better-appointed movie theaters. Longer films caused
ticket prices to double from five cents to ten cents. Although their heyday was
relatively brief, nickelodeons played an important part in creating a
specialized spectator, "the moviegoer", who could now integrate going
to the movies into his or her life in a way that was impossible before. Miriam
Hansen has noted that the term "spectator" had become common by 1910.
The nickelodeon explosion also increased the demand for new films, as thousands
of theaters needed new product. The growth of longer films, which nickelodeons
played a large part in stimulating, also led to the development of intertitles,
which appeared in 1903 and helped make actions and scenes clearer as storylines
became more complicated. A side-effect of this change was that it minimized the
role of exhibitors, since they no longer had the editorial control of
organizing single-shot films into programs, and now their narrative
responsibility (some exhibitors would talk and help explain narratives as they
unfolded) was also minimized by this "internal narration" in the film.
References & Credits: Google, Wikipedia, Wikihow, WikiBooks,
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1910 Nickelodeon / Photo Credit: William James - City of Toronto
Archives - Fonds 1244
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