The Gem Theatre in Detroit
(built 1927) houses a two level theatre with traditional row and aisle seating and intimate stage-level seating at cabaret tables. It shares a lobby with the cabaret style Century Theatre (built 1903). The theatre has stylings of Spanish Revival architecture.
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GEM THEATRE - DETROIT TICKETS
| EVENT | DATE | AVAILABILITY |
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| The Jury Experience: An Immersive Courtroom Case Tickets 6/28 | Jun 28, 2026 Sun, 4:30 PM |  | | The Jury Experience: An Immersive Courtroom Case Tickets 6/28 | Jun 28, 2026 Sun, 7:00 PM |  | | The Jury Experience: An Immersive Courtroom Case Tickets 7/25 | Jul 25, 2026 Sat, 7:00 PM |  | | The Jury Experience: An Immersive Courtroom Case Tickets 7/25 | Jul 25, 2026 Sat, 4:30 PM |  | | The Jury Experience: An Immersive Courtroom Case Tickets 10/16 | Oct 16, 2026 Fri, 6:00 PM |  |
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History
In 1902, the Twentieth Century Club, a group of cultural, socially prominent women, and built a Mission-style building to house their club. The building, now the Century Theatre, is built of red brick trimmed with white sandstone. The first floor originally housed a dining room, while the second floor housed a 400-seat auditorium.
[1]
In 1928, the member of the Century club contracted
George D. Mason to design a theater addition to the Century Club building. The resulting Spanish Revival-style building was leased to the Little Theatre chain, which showed foreign films, and the building was known as the Little Theatre.
In 1933, due to the Depression, the Twentieth Century Club disbanded. The Little Theatre, however, continued, suffering through several name changes, becoming The Rivoli in 1932, Drury Lane (and then the Europa in 1935, the Cinema in 1936, and the Vanguard Playhouse in 1960.
The Vanguard offered live theater rather than movies.
Finally, in 1967, the theatre was named the Gem.
The building was used as an adult movie house until it closed in 1978. Soon afterward, developer
Charles Forbes purchased the combined Gem/Century building, and began a complete restoration of the Gem Theatre in 1990.
The refurbished Gem opened in 1990.
Protected from demolition during
urban renewal for
Comerica Park, the newest home of the
Detroit Tigers, the Gem Theatre and Century Theatre were moved five-blocks on wheels to its new location at 333 Madison Avenue on
16 October 1997. At a distance of 563 meters (1,850 feet) it is the furthest known relocation of a sizable building.
[2]
Notes
References
- History page from Gem Theatre
- Guinness World Records. "Farthest Building Relocation". Accessed 26 August 2006.