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All Canada Ontario Toronto Winter Garden Theatre

Winter Garden Theatre

A botanically themed auditorium blooms within the world’s last operating double-decker theater.

Toronto, Ontario

Added By
Laura Davey
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The Winter Garden Theatre.   dialeleven
Winter Garden Theatre stage and boxes.   Laura Davey / Atlas Obscura User
  rachelmolnar / Atlas Obscura User
Winter Garden Theatre mural.   Laura Davey / Atlas Obscura User
Exterior street view   45rpm / Atlas Obscura User
Winter Garden Theatre seating.   Laura Davey / Atlas Obscura User
Winter Garden Theatre ceiling.   Laura Davey / Atlas Obscura User
  rachelmolnar / Atlas Obscura User
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About

In this theater, leafy plants cascade downward, cloaking the ceiling in a veil of flora. Nature scenes adorn the walls, making each performance feel like an enchanting garden adventure.

In 1913, a flagship theater for Marcus Loew's chain was built in downtown Toronto. Unusually, the theater had two separate stages stacked on top of each other. The Elgin Theatre on the ground floor was traditionally decorated in red and gold with classical references, but the architect had a more novel idea for the Winter Garden seven stories above.

Designed to bring the outside in, the walls were painted with murals of plants, trellises, and even the odd lamppost while the ceiling was covered with real dried leaves. As part of this whimsical fantasy-like decor, lights became lanterns and columns became tree trunks. The stage area itself represented the sky, complete with painted clouds and an illuminated Moon.

Originally built to stage variety performances known as vaudeville, by the 1920s the rise of the film industry had reduced the popularity of the genre. Reacting to lower audience numbers, the Elgin Theatre was converted into a cinema. In 1928, however, after just 15 years in operation, the doors to the Winter Garden were simply locked. They would remain shut for the next 53 years.

Continuing to cater to the movie market, the Elgin Theatre was fitted with a curved "Cinerama" screen in the 1960s which required removing the opera boxes. Curiously, the screen was never actually used and the damage was just covered with a curtain after the owners changed their minds. The fate of the building continued to decline and by the 1970s, this once-grand theater complex was best known for showing softcore porn movies. The last ever film shown there was What the Swedish Butler Saw in the early 1980s.

Threatened with demolition, the Ontario Heritage Trust stepped in and purchased the venues in 1981. With a budget of $29 million, conservation specialists, and an army of volunteers, the two theaters were painstakingly restored, including cleaning of the original paint work with raw bread dough and weaving of over 5,000 beech branches back into the garden ceiling. Now a working theater once again, the Elgin and Winter Garden is the world’s only example of a double-decker Edwardian theater still in operation.

Related Tags

Theaters Plants Architectural Oddities Architecture

Know Before You Go

A 90-minute paid guided tour is available on Mondays year-round, and the building is usually open for free during the Doors Open festival in May. Alternatively, book a show and experience the theaters as they were originally intended! Shows are rare, usually only 0-3 per month. If you’re lucky, you might even be able to ride in one of the original hand-operated elevators!

Community Contributors

Added By

Laura Davey

Edited By

JohnnyXmas, Kerry Wolfe, rachelmolnar, 45rpm

  • JohnnyXmas
  • Kerry Wolfe
  • rachelmolnar
  • 45rpm

Published

April 12, 2018

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Sources
  • http://www.heritagetrust.on.ca/en/index.php/ewg/ewg-home/history
  • 'Toronto Theatres and the Golden Age of the Silver Screen' by Doug Taylor
  • http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/elgin-and-winter-garden-theatre-centre
Winter Garden Theatre
189 Yonge St
Toronto, Ontario
Canada
43.653033, -79.379296
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