Rejuvenating one of Seattle's oldest theaters

With a past that dates to Seattle's vaudeville days, the Columbia City Theater gets a new life, and that could help liven the neighborhood too.

The renovated Columbia City Theater seats 350.

Columbia City Theater

The renovated Columbia City Theater seats 350.

The Columbia City Theater as it stood in the 1950s.

Columbia City Theater

The Columbia City Theater as it stood in the 1950s.

Seattle’s newest music venue is also one of its oldest — the Columbia City Theater.

Located in Rainier Valley, the theater has roots that go back to the days of vaudeville. It originally opened in 1917 and has served as everything from a movie house in the 1950s to a home for DIY punk rock shows in the 1980s. During the heyday of jazz, its stage hosted local legends such as Jimi Hendrix (performing as a member of his high school jazz band) and Quincy Jones, as well as national titans not from around here, including Fats Waller, Duke Ellington, and Ella Fitzgerald.

The theater’s new owners, Robert Hillman and C.B. Shamah, began renovating the venue five months ago and enlisted several players in the music scene to help. The 350-capacity venue is scheduled to reopen its doors this weekend (June 25-26), and to celebrate it will host several free shows featuring some of the city’s most buzzed-about bands. The shows include sets by hip hop group Mash Hall (tonight, June 25), chamber pop group Grand Hallway (Saturday), country rockers The Maldives (July 2) and soul punks The Whore Moans (July 3).

Hillman, who lives in Columbia City, said he knew there was an opportunity to do something special with the vacant theater.

“I always thought this place was underutilized,” he said. “When I found out it was for sale we both knew very quickly we wanted to make a run of it.”

Hillman and Shamah’s run at owning the theater could do more than just rejuvenate one of the city’s oldest music venues. It could help do the same for the neighborhood.

“We recognize what we bring to this area and we want to create a nice destination spot here in Columbia City that will help support local businesses,” Hillman said.

He envisions the theater becoming a gateway into the Rainier Valley for people who don’t frequent the South End, attracting clubgoers to the neighborhood's array of restaurants, bars, and businesses. This is something Hillman and Shamah are already working towards: They're partnering with the theater’s neighbor, Tutta Bella Pizzeria, to sell the restaurant’s food at Columbia City Theater — similar to the Crocodile's deal with Via Tribunali in Belltown.

Some of the theater’s renovations include a new in-house recording studio and a bar, called Bourbon, that will operate independently of the venue. The bar will be open seven days a week and will occasionally host acoustic sets by local musicians, while the theater will host concerts on Fridays and Saturday and act as a recording studio the other days of the week. The studio is being manned by engineer/producer Gary Mula, one of many music-scene "names" involved with the theater.

The venue features brick walls, a high ceiling, and an elevated stage with a bar at the back of the room. A catwalk, balcony, and VIP area provide for various viewpoints. Mula got visibly excited when asked about the room's acoustics. He said the multiple vantage points have the potential to create different sounds, which could make each person's listening experience unique.

Larry Mizell, Jr., a local hip-hop aficionado who wears many hats in the music community, also was brought into the Columbia City Theater fold. Mizell hosts KEXP’s hip-hop program “Street Sounds,” writes a hip-hop column for The Stranger, and belongs to several local hip-hop groups including Mash Hall. He will be booking a monthly hip-hop showcase at the theater.

“Having a superb venue in Rainier Valley is an incredibly important tipping point for that neighborhood,” said Mizell, who grew up in the Rainier Valley. “I feel like Columbia City and the Valley in general is one of the last true virtually unchanged areas of Seattle. It isn’t like the Seattle of the past 10 years. There’s a very genuine vibe of the neighborhood, and having a venue that can reflect that is important.”

The neighborhood could be the most important factor in the new Columbia City Theater's future. Clubs like the Sunset, Tractor Tavern and the Crocodile have neighborhoods littered with boutiques and condos to support them, while Neumos, Chop Suey and the Comet have the trendiness of Capitol Hill on their side. Columbia City Theater isn’t part of a destination neighborhood like those peers, which could pose a problem when it comes to drawing crowds.

“The biggest challenge will be getting the word out and letting people know this is a place to have a good experience,” said Hillman, who's hoping the free shows help build a buzz. “Sure there might be a bit of resistance to get down here at first, but once people get here and see the theater, spend time in the neighborhood and realize it only takes about 10 minutes to get here from most other neighborhoods, I think there will be a lot less resistance.”

Aside from scene vets Mizell and Mula, the Columbia City Theater crew also has enlisted the help of other notables including Fastbacks singer Kim Warnick, who will occasionally bartend, and scene fixture Jim Anderson, known as the famous face behind the soundboard at the old Crocodile Café. Anderson will return to his role behind the boards controlling the sound for Columbia City Theater.

Also on board are the people behind taste-making blog Sound on the Sound, who will be booking monthly showcases. Additionally, the venue will host a weekly “Spin Class” on Thursdays, where figures from the scene will act as DJs at Bourbon.

“I was flattered to be asked to be a part of this,” said Abbey Simmons, co-founder of Sound on the Sound. “Being involved with a group of people that are driven by a deep devotion to the local scene, the music community, and an overall nerdy love of music, which are the same things that have driven Sound on the Sound, is amazing.”

Having known quantities like Simmons, Anderson, Mizell and others on board gives the venue instant credibility within the music community to go along with its rich history. Kevin Sur, the venue’s manager and talent buyer, emphasized that nurturing and supporting the music community is a big part of the vision behind Columbia City Theater.

“Every aspect of how we operate is about taking care of the artists. We want to make sure they know we are here to serve them and not the other way around,” he said.

He added that it’s important to have members of the music community help keep the rich tradition of the theater alive: “I think we all feel more like stewards instead of employees because of the importance of this theater to the city of Seattle and its heritage.”

Hillman agreed and said while the venue has hosted its share of memorable performances he hopes to see many more memories made at Columbia City Theater in the years to come.

“The more memories we can create," he said, "the more successful we will be."

If you go: The Columbia City Theater, 4916 Rainier Ave. S., will celebrate its grand reopening throughout the next two weeks with a series of free concerts featuring a diverse group of local musicians. All shows start at 9 p.m. See the theater's website for details.


About the Author

Travis Hay, a Seattle writer, was a music critic at the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and started the blog and website Guerrilla Candy. You can reach him in care of editor@crosscut.com.

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Comments:

Posted Fri, Jun 25, 11:23 a.m. Inappropriate

There's a typo in the address. It's 4916 not 416.

debbalee

Posted Fri, Jun 25, 2:07 p.m. Inappropriate

I'm not so optimistic about Columbia City. It has a dearth of professional businesses, very little in the way of industry and the area is politically far from cohesive. One thing I have noticed is that the younger white culture in Columbia City is not particularly dynamic, but rather resembles what one might find on Aurora; tattoo parlors, sketchy bars and black clothing are their preferred style.

Additionally, as Angie's is just shutting down, one has to wonder whether the crowd that place contained will start showing up more often at the theater and other venues in the area. All it will take is a few incidents to effectively cripple any business in today's climate.

While it may sound a bit harsh, the truth is that it is the people who live in a neighborhood who make or break it, and the people with the money to make Columbia City thrive are generally older, cautious types who may well sustain a place like Tutta Bella, but not so much a venue that offers hip hop, country rock, chamber pop and soul punk (the latter three being of negligible popularity in the neighborhood as a whole in any event).

Can hip hop/soul punk venues (featuring "The Whore Moans") and family pizza parlors thrive next door to each other? I've really got to question such an idea, and wonder whether the deal to sell Tutta Bella pizza in the theater was a compromise of sorts. I suspect that one or the other is going to have to give, and if it's the family pizza parlors and upscale diners Columbia City is going to end up just like it used to be: boarded up and abandoned (as the theater has been for the past year or so).

Incidentally, I don't know where this Mizell fellow came up with this quote: "I feel like Columbia City and the Valley in general is one of the last true virtually unchanged areas of Seattle."

What is he talking about? Columbia City used to be a place where you didn't get out of your car unless you wanted some crack. Unchanged my eye! I just hope unwarranted enthusiasm for questionable ventures doesn't help return Columbia City to the wasteland it was for some 40 out of the last 50 years.

wfprice

Posted Fri, Jun 25, 2:25 p.m. Inappropriate

That is a good point. Unchanged from what time? Would residents of "Garlic Gulch" in its heyday recognize today's Rainier Avenue?

Time to read up: http://www.rainiervalleyhistory.org/

Posted Fri, Jun 25, 2:52 p.m. Inappropriate

I'm not generally a big booster of Columbia City, though I now call it home. I married into the neighborhood and would not have chosen it on my own accord. But wfprice's baffling comment has me ready to rumble in Columbia City's defense.

What is this "younger white culture" that is not "dynamic"? I think wfprice took a quick glimpse at Lottie's Lounge one day and came to his bizarre conclusion (and how are folks who wear black and have tattoos not dynamic?). What I see are lots of young couples and young families who have bought their first homes. Go to Columbia City Bakery on any day and find a steady stream of young mothers with kids in tow. I see a lot of real ernest, farmer's market going, politically active, yoga and Prius types all around me. The younger (and older) white culture strikes me as a down-market Phinney Ridge, not Aurora.

At any rate, the new Columbia City Theater venture sounds worthwhile and I hope they succeed. My wife and I will have to check out a show there. I'm happy to see some nightlife options in the neighborhood so I don't have to keep trekking to Belltown and Capitol Hill.

Posted Fri, Jun 25, 3:46 p.m. Inappropriate

"I think wfprice took a quick glimpse at Lottie's Lounge one day and came to his bizarre conclusion"

Yup.

"What I see are lots of young couples and young families who have bought their first homes. Go to Columbia City Bakery on any day and find a steady stream of young mothers with kids in tow. I see a lot of real ernest, farmer's market going, politically active, yoga and Prius types all around me."

So you tell me: are these enlightened, organic-bread munching yoginis going to be packing the theater to watch "The Whore Moans" or "Mash Hill?"

Doesn't seem likely. It will be your Lottie's fightin' tattoed types watching the former, and the shootin' Angie's crowd at the latter. Somehow, I doubt either will sustain a stable, profitable business long-term.

"The younger (and older) white culture strikes me as a down-market Phinney Ridge, not Aurora."

Heh, you're pretty much making my point for me. Everyone knows that Aurora *is* down-market Phinney Ridge.

Anyway, take it from someone who knows the neighborhood very intimately: opening a hip hop/punk venue may represent an "important tipping point," but my bet is that it won't "tip" in a manner that you find all that pleasant.

wfprice

Posted Sat, Jun 26, 2:45 a.m. Inappropriate

this particular Mizell fellow was there through most of the 90's, when some were rolling up windows and staring dead ahead, knuckles white on the wheel. i was a local music fanatic and serious student when some were clutching purses and crossing the street. i lived on rainier and alaska, frequented the library, attended franklin, worked at safeway. my mom bartended @ the esquire(and fabro's- y'all don't know nothin about that), waited tables at the silver fork and worked at that same safeway. this neighborhood was beautiful, with it's own funky soul- and it still is. trying to put the venue's fare in a box is as foolish as trying to put the residents of what is (much to the chagrin of many, i'm sure) the most diverse zip code in the US in one. it's a place for music, just as c-town is a (beautiful) place to live. please don't pre-judge either.

-larry mizell jr
hiphop@thestranger.com

lar206

Posted Thu, Jul 1, 3:21 p.m. Inappropriate

Perhaps I can add a bit of context to Larry's quote. I believe he was referencing the boom of the music scene in various neighborhoods in Seattle such as Ballard, Capitol Hill and Belltown when he mentioned Columbia City is a virtually unchanged area. Over teh past decade or so the south end (as well as the north and west ends) of Seattle have been more or less ignored by the music community in regards to establishing credible music venues. This point is something I reference briefly when talking about the challenge the venue has in front of it due to its location. Hope that helps clear things up.

Ear_Candy

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