Last week, I was scouting on Jamaica Ave when I noticed a movie-theater-turned-church up the block.

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This is pretty common in New York, where are a LOT of once great theaters have been gutted and repurposed, most often into churches, pharmacies and gyms. I’ve stopped in quite a few hoping to find the rare gem that’s survived, but have only been disappointed time and again.

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But something immediately stuck out about the Tabernacle of Prayer church.

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What a gloriously stunning facade:

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The entire front is dripping with swirls of ornamentation, a whimsical blend of Spanish and Mexican baroque design – with an aquatic emphasis? Note the mermaid in the center…

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And the numerous half-shells dotting the front. I also love that headressed figure on the right:

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But was the interior as well preserved? Or was this another case of a beautiful facade masking a lifeless interior? I tried to go inside, but the church was closed until Sunday. I was definitely coming back.

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In the meantime, I did a bit of research and was surprised to learn that this was once the Loew’s Valencia movie palace, one of five flagship Wonder Theaters opened by the Loew’s chain in and around New York in the late 1920’s (a time when an elevated subway used to run along Jamaica Ave).

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Picture CC CinemaTreasures.org

All five Wonder Theatres are miraculously still standing. I’ve written about Brooklyn’s Kings Theatre (now being restored), and I’ve been to The Bronx’s Paradise Theatre, Washington Heights’ 175th Street Theatre, and the Loew’s Jersey City. But how had I missed the Valencia?

Then I found this picture of the interior in its hey day, and it floored me. It wasn’t so much a theater as an outdoor village, complete with a night sky. Could this possibly have survived into the 21st century?

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Picture CC CinemaTreasures.org

With fingers crossed, I returned the following Sunday. And, just going into the entranceway, I was taken aback.

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Already, the entire place was dripping with exactly the sort of intricate design I was hoping to find still intact.

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The original ticket booth – can you imagine buying a movie ticket here??

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The ceiling – note the beautiful hanging lanterns, all of which were still working:

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The floor tiles, and not a single one missing. All a very good sign…

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Then I stepped into the entrance galley, and realized I had stumbled on something very special.

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Right off, the towering arched ceiling sets the tone, literally the total polar opposite of what a movie-going experience is like today. If I don’t stop myself, I’ll use the word “glorious” too much, but that’s exactly what I kept thinking.

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Note how the wooden ticket line banisters are still in place:

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In a 1990 article, the NY Times designed this as “more Persian than anything else, a riot of scupltured, gilded plaster screens and balconies.” The balconies line both walls…

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…and just look at the insane designwork below:

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Another fascinating feature – about one fifth of the lobby has been sectioned off by these elaborate columns:

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Guessing here, but perhaps this was the designated exit?

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Bringing me right back to Spain were the numerous colorful tiles set into the plaster:

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Today, religious messages are displayed where movie advertisements would have been:

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From there, I headed into the lobby proper, and the grandeur only intensified.

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Turning right into the central part of the lobby…

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…there was suddenly no question I was in a palace – movie or otherwise.

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The Loew’s Wonder Theatres were created in the late-1920s for movie-goers for whom midtown Manhattan wasn’t easily accessible. The Valencia was the first of the five to open on January 12, 1929.

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The Valencia was the work of architect John Eberson, who designed nearly 100 movie palaces around the world, most described as “atmospheric” for their over-the-top, exotic decor. Sadly, many are long gone, razed to make way for new development in an age where such a theater could house twenty screens instead of just one.

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The Valencia is largely considered to be the most elaborate of all his New York theaters.

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And it really is unbelievable just how much has been packed into every inch of space:

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One of my favorite elements of the lobby is the enormous fountain stationed right at the entrance, which all movie-goers would have to pass before entering the theater.

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Incredibly, it was working until just recently:

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Several more animals keep watch:

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The sort-of Spanish/sort-of Mexican wall decor:

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Even the air vents have flair:

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And then it was time to head into the theater…

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…which might as well have been a trip back to 1929.

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I’m not even sure the term “movie palace” does the Valencia justice. More like “movie cathedral.”

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Huge pan – click for full-size!

As the NY Times wrote in 1990, “the vast auditorium itself will make even the most jaded architectural pilgrim gasp, or even kneel.” I’m pretty sure I did both.

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Huge pan – Click for full-size!

What I absolutely love about the Valencia is how it puts the audience not in a movie theater, but rather in the center of a Spanish – or is that Mexican? – town.

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Fake foliage lines the edges of building facades covered in over-the-top ornamentation:

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You practically expect to look up and see someone watching the movie from one of the many faux balconies dotting the edges:

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Each side of the theater is different, giving you the sense of being a part of a movie set.

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The ceiling, meant to be the sky, is painted a dark blue with hints of cloud. And if you look really closely, you can just make out tiny pin-pricks of light. In other words, movie-goers would look up from the film and see a starry night sky overhead.

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By the mid-1970’s, audiences had shrunk and most of the fare at the Valencia were Blaxploitation films. The theater was donated to the Tabernacle of Prayer church, who has kept it in immaculate shape ever since. Said Reverend Johnnie Washington in 1977, “It has a beauty, an atmosphere that makes you feel you are at someplace sacred.”

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The theater holds 3,500, and there isn’t a bad seat in the house.

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Huge pan – click for full-size!

A few changes have been made over the years. The chandelier above is of course new. Also, a number of formerly nude statues above the altar seemed somewhat out of place for a house of worship.

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But, some angel wings and robes later, all is taken care of:

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In particular, I love the balconies running along the sides of the theater.

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While I highly doubt anyone actually ever watched movies from here…

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…they are actually accessible from the balcony level:

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Detail on the theater seats:

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The side aisles:

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Golden torches lighting the way:

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All the original aisle signs are still in place, including one denoting a Children Section, for when kids could be dropped off at the theater on weekends:

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A series of cut-outs offer the sky impression to those seated under the balcony:

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My favorite door in the theater…

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…featuring this flowering emblem:

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Golden metal ropes line the walls:

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Even for those holding the cheaper balcony tickets, the trip upstairs offered no lack of splendor:

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The mezzanine level:

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Check out the amazing railings:

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The entrance to the balcony – note the arched wooden doors:

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The men’s room entrance…

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…complete with sailing ship tiles.

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And finally, the women’s room entrance, with a different motif:

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A special thanks to Sister Forbes, who saw me taking pictures and insisted I take a private guided tour with her. From all the church patrons I spoke with, the Valencia is a treasured home treated with reverence, and it’s safe to say the old movie palace is in good hands.

-SCOUT

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  1. Elli Avatar
    Elli

    In addition to showing movies, the theater was rented to schools for their graduation functions. My junior high school commencement was held here in 1968.

    The last movie I saw here was “2001: A Space Odyssey”, also in 1968. It was an epic film and the Valencia was a grand theater in which to enjoy it.

    1. Elli Avatar
      Elli

      Minor correction: my graduation was 1970. (It’s been a long time.)

  2. AliKaplan48 Avatar
    AliKaplan48

    Since 5 years old till my adult years when the theater closed, I enjoyed many movies here. we would go to see The Ten Commandments every Spring for years. In my teen years, we would meet our friends in front of the Koi pond before going to find seats together to enjoy the double features that played there. The bathrooms were just as beautiful, there were special toilets for the little kids, just their size. When I re-did my bathroom, I chose dark marble that was the same as the tops of the sinks in the theater,brings back memories every day. There was nothing like staring up at the star filled sky and feeling you were in the courtyard of a beautiful palace while sitting in those red velvet seats that had ashtrays in the arm rests. So sad that we can never experience those days again!

  3. Saretta Avatar
    Saretta

    If you ever get a chance to come out west to Marion, Ohio you will find another John Eberson theatre in amazing shape in such a small town. It’s about half the size of the one you visited here but many of the details are the same. It has been kept in amazing shape and is still used for it’s original purpose.

  4. Danielle Avatar
    Danielle

    How wonderful to see such visual delights! I volunteered for some years at the Loews Jersey, in Jersey City – one of the sister “Wonder Theatres” to this beautiful example. All five are in various states of restoration/preservation/decay, and it’s such a joy to see that this one is thriving. Thanks so much for this entry – I love all of your writings, but this was a special, personal treat.

  5. dayrider Avatar

    No problem getting bums on seats at that church !

  6. Noelle Avatar
    Noelle

    *GASP* At some point my jaw dropped. Stunning! You are a beautiful storyteller, and I was totally living in that theater through this entire post. Thank you for sharing.

  7. Aliiak Avatar
    Aliiak

    It reminds me greatly of one in my own city, The Auckland Civic, which is done up in the Arabian Nights theme, it’s used now as both a stage and movie theatre, and I love going into it. Esspecially since they re-did the night sky to reflect our Southern skies.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auckland_Civic_Theatre

  8. Lucy W Avatar
    Lucy W

    WOW indeed !- Can non-religious types visit this amazing palace ? I ask because am visiting NYC in the Summer !If yes, details/contacts pls !

  9. Eva Avatar
    Eva

    This place looks amazing! I’m from the Netherlands, and one dy hope to go to America, I will definitely visit this place. Also; it is funny, because in my country it is churches that change into movietheaters, clubs etcetera. With you it is the other way around. I really like that they look after the place so well, but wouldn’t mind watching a movie there:).

  10. randolph man Avatar
    randolph man

    Well done, Ian! Speaking of the Loew’s Kings, did I ever tell you about Christian Blackwood’s documentary “Memoirs of a Movie Palace”? It was shown at Telluride in about 1980, but seems to have vanished from sight since. He visited us at MOV circa 1990.

    1. Jim Elliott Avatar
      Jim Elliott

      You can order the movie for $100 plus shipping (pretty excessive) from http://www.michaelblackwoodproductions.com/history_memoirs.php

  11. ileen Avatar
    ileen

    I assume you know about United Palace up in Washington Heights that used to be Loews 175th Street. Now it’s a church and concert venue, at least as of this year. Seems like the website domain has expired, so I don’t know what’s happening there now.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Palace_Theater

  12. VinC Avatar
    VinC

    I wish the church I was forced to attend as a child had as many wonders to contemplate during the long boring services. Thanks for giving this palace the royal treatment and not skimping on the number of photos.

  13. YK Avatar
    YK

    Thank you for sharing this! I’m really glad to know this wonderful place is in good hands. Look forward to visiting there soon!

  14. Mark Fuller Avatar
    Mark Fuller

    I hold no brief for the Tabernacle of Prayer Church, but if their sensitivity and guardianship of this amazing building is any indication, they must be good, good, people. Our thanks must go to them for looking after a piece of heritage that they could easily have ruined, even destroyed, as so many other majetic movie palaces were in the seventies and eighties.

  15. Carried Avatar
    Carried

    Spwcracular!
    Do you have an idea if all the work, carvings and fabrications were done in NYC? Id imagine so, just hard not to think of how labo

  16. Carried Avatar
    Carried

    Spwcracular!
    Do you have an idea if all the work, carvings and fabrications were done in NYC? Id imagine so, just hard not to think of how labour intensive the work of building such a palace was!

  17. kurisu7885 Avatar
    kurisu7885

    As much as I typically dislike the excess in church design, I admit that is pretty goddamn classy.

  18. Audrey Burtrum-Stanley Avatar
    Audrey Burtrum-Stanley

    GOD is everywhere but is especially well noted in marvelous places like this! If the movie-house could not keep operating, how splendid that it was donated and ‘saved for GOD’! This is MY KIND OF PLACE – both as a former place of fun as well as today’s serious worship. Everything – from the texture of the wall’s plaster to the ceiling’s twinkle lights – I love it all. The added angel-wings and delicate robes on the statues was perfection for the church-transformation! If this decor is ‘too much’ then I yearn for ‘more, more, more’! When we go to NYC again, we WILL be at this church on Sunday morn!

  19. Am Java Avatar
    Am Java

    My mother and aunt lived down the street from this theatre..My mom is now deceased but we spoke with my aunt who said they went there often growing up

  20. Andrea Lubatkin Richman Avatar

    I grew up in Queens Village in the 1950s and 1960s and–when we got old enough, my friends and I would go shopping in Jamaica around 165th Street. Going to that theater was a “special experience”, we had other theaters, closer to home, but I especially remember graduating from Martin Van Buren High School there–we had about 1600 students, etc. at that time in 1965! It was a truly inspiring setting, I am glad that it has been preserved so lovingly as a church and not turned into a multiplex, bowling alley or auto supply store. It should be given historic landmark status, if it has not been already! I especially remember the starry sky above!