Beacham Theatre

28°32′35″N 81°22′46″W / 28.543°N 81.379472°W / 28.543; -81.379472

Beacham Theatre
Exterior of venue (c.2016)
Former namesBeacham Theatre (1921–1976; 2011–present)

Great Southern Music Hall (1976–81)
Laser World (1981–82)
Moulin Orange (1983–84)
Celebrity Dinner Theater (1984–87)
Aahz (1988–92)
Dekko's (1992–94)
Zuma Beach Club (1994–2000)

Tabu (2001–10)
General information
TypeTheater
Architectural styleCommercial, Art Deco and Mediterranean Revival
Address46 N Orange Ave
Orlando, FL 32801-2419
CompletedDecember 9, 1921
Renovated1936, 1953, 1976, 1981, 1984, 1988, 1992, 2000
ClientBraxton Beacham Sr.
OwnerBeacham Theatre, LLC. (Missy Casscells and Frank Hamby)
Dimensions
Other dimensions145 feet (44 m) across x 213.5 feet (65.1 m) deep
Technical details
Structural systemReinforced concrete and brick with stucco out-surface
Floor area30,965 square foot (2,876.7 m2)
Other information
Seating capacity1,250
Website
Venue Website

The Beacham Theatre is a cinema built in 1921 by Braxton Beacham Sr. in the city of Orlando, Florida. The current address of the theater is 46 North Orange Avenue, and it is located at the southwest corner of Orange Avenue and Washington Street. The building's current lack of impressive architecture is offset by its significant cultural history. The Beacham Theatre was considered an important contributing structure when the Downtown Orlando historic district was created in 1980 and the building was granted local landmark status in 1987.

The Beacham was once part of the vaudeville circuit and hosted celebrity acts such as John Philip Sousa, the Ziegfeld Follies and W.C. Fields, whose signature was once visible inside a dressing room. In the eras of silent film and Classical Hollywood cinema, the Beacham was operated as a movie theater that used then-current state-of-the-art motion picture technology.

The Beacham, as it is currently named, has since been used as a series of concert venues and nightclubs thus saving it from demolition. The Beacham Theatre was once home to the internationally recognized late-night underground discotheque Aahz, a notable early component of the US electronic dance music movement in the early 1990s.