Sunday, April 20, 2025

"I Wanna Hold Your Hand"

Six New Jersey teenagers head to the big city in 1964 with hopes of catching a glimpse of the Beatles the weekend of their appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show in "I Wanna Hold Your Hand" (Universal, 1978). The film revolves around CBS Studio 50 at 1697 Broadway in New York. Here they're using a backlot version for the exterior. The night of the show when one of the gang climbs a tower atop the theatre trying to disable a microwave antenna we get a nice look at the Eastern Columbia Building.
 
In 1967 CBS renamed their theatre the Ed Sullivan. Originally it was Hammerstein's. Beginning in 1993 it was used by the David Letterman Show and, since 2013, the Late Show with Stephen Colbert. The other focus is the Plaza Hotel, where the Beatles were staying. They use a backlot set for the exterior scenes with the Biltmore for many of the lobby scenes. We also do lots of driving around on Main St., 6th and 7th. There's a scene in a barber shop near 6th and Main and we see a bit of the "Santa Fe" vertical sign. 

The film features Nancy Allen, Bobby DiCicco, Marc McClure, Susan Kendall Newman, Wendi Jo Sperber, Theresa Saldana, Eddie Deezen, Christian Juttner and Will Jordan as Ed Sullivan. Robert Zemeckis directed. The cinematography was by Donald M. Morgan.   
 
 
 
Inside the theatre. It's obvious we're not in New York's Studio 50 but certainly difficult at this point to see what theatre was used. 
 
 
 
It's the day before the big show and ushers are gathered on the main floor for a briefing. 
 
 
 
Looking in from the rear of the house. Here it becomes evident that we're at the Hollywood Playhouse, 1735 Vine St. Originally it was a legit house, later a TV studio with its best-known branding as the Hollywood Palace. It's now a music venue called Avalon. 
 
 
 
Will Jordan as Ed Sullivan briefs the guys on the rambunctious behavior they might expect. 
 


Later Theresa Saldana, one of the teenagers who aspires to be a photographer, sneaks in to get some shots. 
 
 
 
On the set the Beatles will use. She's accosted a moment later by a security guard and taken downstage right and shoved out the stage door. But before she leaves, the guard agrees to open the door for her during the show if she'll bring $50. 
 

Shoved out the stage door, Theresa ought to be at street level. Instead we're up on the second level of a fire escape. Look familiar? We're in the exit passage on the south side of the Palace Theatre in Los Angeles, 630 S. Broadway. She's just come out of an exit from the 1st balcony.   
 
 
 
One of the gang rushing to the theatre on the night of the show.  


 
Will Jordan onstage before the show trying to calm the action in the balcony. Note a bit of the Hollywood Playhouse's ceiling. 
 
 
 
Another balcony shot. 
 
 
 
A look at the stage during the show. 
 
See the Los Angeles Theatres pages about the Hollywood Playhouse/Avalon for the history of the theatre and many, many photos.   
 
 

To get to the big city Marc McClure, one of the teenagers without a license, has borrowed a limo from his father's mortuary. The show has begun but Theresa, young aspiring photographer, has come up with $50 and her friend is driving her to the stage door. In this shot we're looking west on 7th St. toward Hill.   

The blank marquee just beyond the intersection is the Warner, at the time of this shoot closed and getting turned into a jewelry mart. See the pages about the Warner Downtown on the Los Angeles Theatres site for a history of the building as well as several hundred photos. The theatre, now used for selling jewelry, opened as the Pantages in 1920.  
 
 
 
Pulling into the alley between Broadway and Spring, behind the Palace Theatre. 
 

 
 
Theresa Saldana heading up to the stage door. This passage later makes appearances in many films including the 1993 Bette Midler TV version of "Gypsy," "The Gambler," "Dreamgirls," as the back entrance to Ciro's in "Being the Ricardos" and in "Blonde."   


But she returns to the limo and uses her $50 to bribe a cop who has arrived and asks to see the license of her limo driving friend. The Beatles set is over and they exit and think this is their limo parked at the stage door. Our heroine, sitting in the front seat, turns around and as the limo heads down the alley, gets the shot of the Beatles she came to the city for. 

See the pages about the Palace Theatre on the Los Angeles Theatres site. It opened in 1911 as the Orpheum.    

On IMDb: "I Wanna Hold Your Hand

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