DTOS
History

The Boyd Theatre, once located at 19th
and Chestnut Streets in Philadelphia, was the original home of the Dickinson
Kimball pipe organ. Built during the golden era of the movie palace, the
Boyd first opened its doors to the public at 2:00 P.M. on December 25,
1928. On the screen was Paramount Picture's first all-talking picture, Interference,
featuring Evelyn Brent, Clive Brook and William Powell. Featured in an
accompanying Vitaphone short were Eddie Cantor, Ruth Etting and Bobbie
Arnst. Also on the bill was Walt Disney's first successful cartoon (in
sound) Steamboat Willie, starring a mouse who would later to become known
as Mickey Mouse. Through the years, such films as Gone With the
Wind, Dinner at Eight and This is Cinerama! had their premieres at
this theatre.
The Boyd's decor was departure from the usual Louis XIV and Moorish styles
of movie palaces of the time. Rather, it was a superb example of the Art
Deco style that was beginning to be in vogue. Far in advance of
its time, the rich beauty of the Boyd Theatre was dedicated to the progress of
women in the history of the world. Murals, stained glass insets and
statues symbolized the supremacy of women, with a great mural atop of the
proscenium, depicting the defense of the Amazon Queen against the warriors of
Asia on one side and African warriors on the other. The theatre's theme
was continued by a succession of murals down the sides of the proscenium and
along the walls of the auditorium. A series of modernistic gold and black
metal silhouettes set in illuminated niches along the sides of orchestra floor
created a striking effect. These beautiful works of art represented women
of different cultural and ethnic backgrounds.
A
live feature at every performance was the playing of the Boyd's grand organ,
situated on a separate lift, to the left of the orchestra pit. Built by the
Chicago firm of the W.W. Kimball Company, the instrument (opus 7050) featured 19
ranks (sets) of pipes and a three-manual, horseshoe-style console. In
keeping with the decor of the theatre, the console was decorated in French Blue
with silver trim. House organists were Otto Beck and Joseph K.
Glasner. The organ was used only for a short time, as it was never used to
accompany silent pictures. As was customary for many theatre organs of the
era, it lay dormant for decades until a memorable evening in 1969.
Robert Dilworth, a member of the faculty of the John Dickinson High School, near Stanton, Delaware, had, for some time, been negotiating with Walter
Froehlich of the RKO-Stanley Warner Corporation (successors to the original
owners of the Boyd Theatre) about the possibility of acquiring a pipe organ from
instruments still installed and unused in RKO theatres. Encouraged by
school administrators, Mr. Dilworth concluded a contract for the Boyd organ to
be removed for use in the Dickinson High School auditorium.
When Mr. Dilworth and his associates inspected the theatre on November 9, 1968,
the years had not only taken a toll on the Kimball organ, but also of the
theatre itself. The grandeur of old was little in evidence. The
magnificent proscenium was all but obliterated from by a Cinerama screen, part
of which was even fastened inside the organ pipe chambers. The
orchestra pit was raised to stage level and carpeted, but the organ console was
remained lowered on its own lift, covered at floor level with a wooden
cover. A near generation of dust greeted the inspectors, along with bent
and damaged pipes (from the Cinerama screen's installation), but overall, the
organ was found to be, in their words, in excellent condition.
A farewell concert was deemed to be practical and thus, on Washington's Birthday 1969, the great blue and silver console arose from the depths in
the theatre for one last time. At midnight, organist Larry Ferrari played the Boyd
organ. His opening theme, entertainer Steve Allen's This Could Be the Start of Something Big,
was unknowingly at the time, a prophecy. The Boyd Kimball pipe
organ has become the world-famous Dickinson Theatre Organ, now greatly augmented
through the years. It currently contains 66 ranks of pipes.
(Adapted from The Boyd Theatre by Irvin R. Glazer, included in The
Dickinson Kimball Story, available from DTOS.)