Howard Theatre sixth and t streets nw
the legendary howard opened in 1910 as the nation’s first major theater built for African Americans. It offered plays, variety shows, concerts, and movies. In the 1930s, under manager Shep Allen, the Howard became part of the segregation-era “Chitlin’ Circuit” for African American performers. Allen’s Amateur Night contests launched Billy Eckstine, Pearl Bailey, and many others. Godfather of Go-Go Chuck Brown, the inventor of “DC’s own sound,” first worked outside the Howard Theatre as a youngster, calling: “Shoes shined, shoes shined, five cents, a nickel, or a half a dime!” As the neighborhood went, so did the Howard. Although the theater escaped damage in the riots of April 1968, audiences thereafter avoided the riot-scarred neighborhood. The Howard closed in 1970, reopened in 1974, and closed again. Rehabilitation started in 2010. For years, the Howard’s stage doors opened to Wiltberger Street near the Wonder Bread Bakery, formerly Dorsch’s White Cross Bakery. Fans would linger amid the aroma of fresh bread, watching for performers bound for U Street night spots or an after-show soiree at Cecelia’s. This area’s bakeries included two others near Howard University: Corby (later Continental) and Bond Bread. Baseball fans leaving Griffith Stadium remember stopping for fresh doughnuts. Near the Howard Theatre at 614 S Street was Jean Clore’s Guest House and after-hours club. “Well-known dignitaries from every walk of life” stayed at Clore’s “swanky homey hotel,” according to the black press of the 1930s. In 1982 the New Community Church moved into the building.
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