Magnificent buildings do not always enjoy long and magnificent lives, and therein lies the tale of the two greatest movie palaces ever built in the Twin Cities — the Minnesota Theater in Minneapolis and the Capitol Theatre in St. Paul.
Both were products of the 1920s, an age of grandiose dreams that ended by crashing into the hardest times the nation had ever known, and both were gone within 45 years.
The Minnesota (later known as Radio City), the largest movie theater ever built in the state, opened in 1928 at the northeast corner of 9th Street and LaSalle Avenue. It had 4,056 seats, a three-story lobby and a huge stage fronted by an elevating orchestra pit. Also rising from the depths was a mighty Wurlitzer organ reputed to have one pipe “as big as a streetcar.”
Known to be the fifth-biggest theater in the country, it was built at a cost of $2 million by a group of investors led by Sumner T. McKnight, a lumberman and banker whose 1892 mansion still stands at 2200 Park Av. S.
McKnight began laying plans for the theater in 1926. He and his investors sold bonds to finance its construction and hired Chicago theater architects Anker Graven and Arthur Mayger to design it.
Everything about the Minnesota, which took its design cues from French and Italian Renaissance sources, was over the top in a Gatsby-esque sort of way.
The lobby, framed by colossal faux-marble columns, featured enormous crystal chandeliers hung from an ornate vaulted ceiling decorated in tones of blue, gold and rose. A sweeping marble staircase provided access to the upper sections of the auditorium, a vast space presided over by a central ceiling dome outfitted with hidden, multicolored lights.
Orchestra and organ concerts, a stage presentation and a movie starring St. Paul native Richard Dix formed the opening night program on March 23, 1928. A crowd of 4,000 invited guests were on hand for the event, guided to their seats by a staff of 55 spiffily attired, all-male ushers. Just before the theater opened, a reporter for the Minneapolis Journal wrote: “A new meteor will flash in the entertainment heavens tomorrow. Its name is Minnesota.”