The New Amsterdam Ghost – Part II

After seeing the unsettling apparition of a beautiful woman late one night at the soon-to-be opened New Amsterdam Theatre in New York City, the night security guard viewed a collection of photographs at the theater manager’s office and pointed to an image of Olive Thomas.   The manager, Dana Amendola, now the Vice President of Disney Theatricals, began to do a little research and uncovered what he could about the woman.

Olive Thomas - Bain News Service (Library of Congress)

Olive Thomas – Bain News Service (Library of Congress)

Olive Thomas started as a model after winning The Most Beautiful Girl in New York City contest.  She joined the Ziegfeld Follies in 1915.

The Ziegfeld follies were the creation of Florence Ziegfeld, Jr., a theatrical impresario.

Florence Ziegfeld, Jr. - Photo by Alfred Cheney Johnston (Library of Congress)

Florence Ziegfeld, Jr. – Photo by Alfred Cheney Johnston (Library of Congress)

He launched the show in 1907, and it remained popular until 1931. The revue-like format brought together vaudeville talent like Eddie Cantor, Josephine Baker, and W.C. Fields, with music from top composers such as Irving Berlin, and elaborately staged scenes. The stage musical and then the movie, Funny Girl captured the glamour and grandeur of the follies as it tells the story of Fanny Brice’s time with the show.

1968 Movie Poster

1968 Movie Poster

Although married to Billie Burke, Ziegfeld had a reputation for having affairs including with Olive Thomas.  This famous painting from 1920 allegedly hung in Ziegfeld’s office at the New Amsterdam.  Olive supposedly ended the affair when Ziegfeld refused to leave his wife.

Painting by Alberto Vargas

Painting by Alberto Vargas

She moved to Hollywood to begin a movie career.  There she met and married Jack Pickford brother of the famous Mary Pickford.  Tragedy struck on their second honeymoon in Paris on September 5th, 1920.  Jack said that when he retired after a night of partying, Olive mistakenly took bi-chloride of mercury.  The coffin-shaped pills were to be crushed and applied as a topical treatment for Jack’s syphilis.  After failed attempts to save her, Olive died in agony 5 days later, blind and her throat too burned for her to speak.  Despite rumors that she was murdered or committed suicide, the French police ruled her death accidental.

In the months following her death, stage hands saw the ghost of Olive at the theater.  She wore a green beaded gown and carried a blue bottle in her hand.   Dana Amendola discovered that the sightings of Olive in the theater’s early days coincided with how his security guard had seen her.

Paranormal activity continued at the theater following its reopening on April 2, 1997.  One stage hand reported that during the run of the The Lion King, while he was working in what is called the trap room beneath the stage, he felt something behind him.  He glanced over his shoulder and saw a pair of see-thru legs going up the stairs to the stage.  Although the hair on the back of his neck stood up, he didn’t feel threatened.

According to Amendola, Olive only appears to men.  In the introduction of my book, Ghosts and Murders of Manhattan, I recount what happened to one of my fellow ushers the night we all slept at the theater due to a snow storm.  Read the excerpt here.

Some of the paranormal experiences at the theater seem a bit more aggressive.  In my next blog post, I’ll recount more of the strange happenings, and the murders I discovered occurred at the theater that may also be related to its paranormal history.

Glamour and Murder at Ziegfeld’s New Amsterdam Theatre

When I first moved to New York City after graduating from The Boston Conservatory with a degree in musical theater performance (at the age of 41!), I got whatever job I could and was fortunate to end up as a Broadway usher at The New Amsterdam Theatre.   The architecture awed me, and little did I know that I had stepped into one of the most actively haunted theaters in the city.  I will share the New Am’s (as we ushers referred to it) history and ghosts over two blog posts.

Courtesy of the Library of Congress

Courtesy of the Library of Congress

Let me begin at the theater’s rebirth at the hands of Disney.  Built in 1903 and located on the famous 42nd Street in Times Square, the New Amsterdam appeared in shambles when the Disney Theatrical Corporation (a division of Walt Disney) leased the building in 1993.  They found holes in the roof, mushrooms growing in the orchestra pit, and nesting birds.

BCA New York

BCA New York

BCA New York

BCA New York

With the guidance of Building Conservation Associates, Inc., which specializes in Heritage Conservation, Disney spent a reported 34 million dollars to restore the theater to its original glory.

BCA New York

BCA New York

Walking through the marble lobby, theatergoers today experience the same grandeur that their predecessors did at the end of the gilded age.  The Art Nouveau details, like those shown below, make the New Amsterdam the crown jewel of all the Broadway theaters in the city.

BCA New York

BCA New York

BCA New York

BCA New York

BCA New York

BCA New York

In addition to this rich architectural legacy, Disney also became caretaker to at least one ghost.  A few months prior to the theater’s opening on April 2nd, 1997 the first dramatic paranormal event occurred. On a cold January morning, a telephone woke Dana Amendola, the house manager for the theater at the time, from a deep sleep at 2 a.m.  The theater’s security guard on duty asked Dana to come at once.  Fearing a catastrophe, Dana raced to the theater and found the guard pacing outside the stage door. It took much coaxing to get the anxious man to reenter the building.  Once inside, the guard explained that when he did his usual rounds and came to the stage, he felt something behind him.  Glancing over his shoulder, he saw a beautiful woman in the glow of the stage’s ghost light.  She wore a beaded gown and headdress with a green sash and in her hand was a blue bottle.  As he started to address her, she walked past him, heading for the 41st Street stage door.  She turned back to him, blew him a kiss, and continued through the wall, and the shaken guard ran out the door.  Some weeks later after Dana had collected historical pictures to mount around theater, he invited the guard to his office.  Laying the photos out, Amendola asked him if anyone looked familiar, and the guard pointed at the photo below of Olive Thomas.

Olive Thomas - Photo hanging in the New Am lobby

Olive Thomas – Photo hanging in the New Am lobby

In my next blog post, I’ll share Thomas’s connection to the theater and when she first haunted the theater.