Fillmore Auditorium (Denver)
Coordinates: 39°44′26″N 104°58′37.76″W / 39.74056°N 104.9771556°W
Entrance of The Fillmore seen from Colfax Avenue | |
Former names |
Mammoth Roller Skating Rink (1907-11) Mammoth Garden Roller Club (1935-62) Mammoth Gardens (1969-70; 1981-82) The Market (1976) Mammoth Events Center (1986-99) |
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Address |
1510 Clarkson Street Denver, CO 80218 |
Owner | Live Nation Entertainment |
Type | Auditorium |
Seating type | Standing room only |
Capacity |
4,500 (Mammoth Gardens) 5,100 (Mammoth Events Center) 3,700 (Fillmore Auditorium) |
Construction | |
Opened | 1907 |
Renovated | 1968, 1986, 1999 |
Closed |
1917-35; 1970-1976 1976-81; 1982-86 |
Tenants | |
Rocky Mountain Rollergirls (WFTDA) (2009-Present) | |
Website | |
Venue Info |
The Fillmore Auditorium (often known as The Fillmore Denver) is a concert venue located in the Capitol Hill neighborhood in Denver, Colorado. Since opening in 1907, the venue has hosted numerous functions both private and public. It holds the title of the largest indoor venue for general admission seating in Colorado. The venue also holds an exclusive dual Minors with Adults Liquor License in Colorado for a private venue; it allows Minors and Consumers over 21 to stand together, rather than having to be separated by their ages. In 2006, local newspaper Westword awarded the venue the "Best Place to Run into a Hippie turned Yuppie".[1] The venue also houses an office for the Bill Graham Foundation, a non-profit organization that provides music grants.
History
In the 1907, the venue opened as the Mammoth Roller Skating Rink becoming a prominent after-school hangout for the nearby East High School. After the roller rink closed in the Spring of 1910, the building was occupied by the Fritchle Automobile & Battery Company. During its tenure as a manufacturing plant, the venue produced nearly 500 vehicles, the first being purchased by Titanic survivor, Molly Brown. The plant closed in October 1917.[2]
The building remained unoccupied for several years until it was purchased by Irving Jacob and became the city's first recreational center. Known as Mammoth Garden Roller Club, the center offered ice skating, hockey, basketball, ice polo, boxing and wrestling. During this time, it also became the home venue for the Mammoth Garden Dodgers (which was a part of the Colorado Roller Hockey League) and a professional basketball team before the construction of the Denver Coliseum.[3]
The venue also served as a temporary wedding hall before and during the World War II. It also housed the famed "Skating Vanities" during its 1945–46 season.[4] The venue also hosted the first hockey event broadcast on Armed Forces Radio Services. Every Thursday, games from the venue were broadcast by KLM at Lowry Field.[5] It also hosted the US National Indoor Figure and Speed Championships in 1950, 1952 and 1954.[6] In 1960, the venue hosted its first concert by soul singer James Brown.
As business began moving to the Denver Coliseum, the venue closed and became a warehouse for the Colorado Mercantile Company for five years, closing in 1967. The building was purchased in 1968 by concert promoter Stuart Green and shortened the name to Mammoth Gardens. The venue was converted from an ice rink to a nightclub. His hopes were to compete with Bill Graham and his Fillmore franchise. The venue worked closely with Barry Fey to bring national touring acts to the Denver scene. Although only in business for eight months, the club hosted concerts by the decade's leading artists including Jimi Hendrix, The Doors, The Who, The Grateful Dead and Joe Cocker. The most remembered show was performed in April 1970 by Jethro Tull. During the show, a patient escape from nearby hospital, St. Luke Medical Center, entered the kitchen area and began stabbing himself in the chest. Tainted as "bad juju", the club closed in October 1970 as a push by city officials to have the venue closed to improve the surrounding neighborhood. The building reopened briefly in 1976 as a farmers' market, known simply as The Market however, this only lasted four months.
In 1981, the venue was reopened under the "Mammoth Gardens" moniker to host sporting and music events while also service as a private meeting room and banquet hall. After 14 months, the doors closed once again due to dispute amongst its partners.[7] Four years later, the venue was purchased by Manuel and Magaly Fernandez. After some renovations, the venue became the Mammoth Events Center. During this reinvention, the venue became the main site for Denver's Latin music scene, and various other touring acts. During its 12-year run, the venue hosted various concerts, with such names as Ozzy Osbourne, Cyndi Lauper, Pantera, Slayer, Club Nuveau, DJ Quik, Rick James, Cypress Hill, Siouxsie & the Banshees, Big Audio Dynamite, Jane's Addiction, Fugazi, Offspring, Sublime, Butthole Surfers, Dream Theater, Blink 182, Oasis, Coldplay, Green Day, and many others. It also hosted various sporting events over the years from the Ultimate Fighting Championship and Pro Wrestling America and World Championship Wrestling.
The venue was sold by the Fernandezs in February 1999 to Chuck Morris of Bill Graham Presents, and later all entities combined forces with Live Nation and the venue re-opened as the Fillmore Auditorium. This was met with controversy amongst the Colorado audience and luminaries, many of whom felt Denver had an ample amount of music venues. The Magness Arena, Ogden Theater, Paramount Theatre, the Music Hall at LoDo and the Gothic Theatre were already claiming fame to Denver's mid-size concert scene. Due to its many physical changes and uses over the years, some promoters saw the venue as a failure and were not easily persuaded to host a concert at the venue. Promoter Barry Fey, who preferred not to use the venue, stated that "hell" had better connotations than "Mammoth", and the basement dressing rooms were likened to Hitler's bunker.
Despite its challenges, the building was heavily renovated between November 1998 and May 1999 relocating the stage, fixing the acoustics and adding many amenities. The inaugural concert was performed by the Trey Anastasio Band on May 19, 1999. The Fillmore has grown to become a prominent force in Denver's music scene. Since its 1999 opening, the auditorium has hosted concerts by Widespread Panic, NOFX, Morrissey, Foo Fighters, Bad Religion, Umphrey's McGee, Sound Tribe Sector 9, Marilyn Manson, Joss Stone, Nelly Furtado, James Blunt, Owl City, Armin van Buuren, Erykah Badu, Paramore as well as Five Iron Frenzy's final performance. Currently (2007-present) The Fillmore Auditorium is booked and managed by promoter Eric Pirritt and Live Nation Entertainment. The Fillmore annually ranks as one of America's top grossing and attended clubs in both Billboard and Pollstar Magazines.
On July 18, 2015 Meghan Trainor performed in the venue as part of her MTrain Tour 2015. Slash and Future have also recently played the venue.
References
- ↑ "Best Of Award". Westword. Village Voice Media. Retrieved 2010-10-02.
- ↑ Walker, Craig F. (2006-05-21). "The Colfax Story". Denver Post. MediaNews Group. Retrieved 2010-10-02.
- ↑ "Denver hockey attracts 1,800". Billboard Magazine. The Billboard Publishing Company. 59 (39): 66. 1947-10-04. Retrieved 2010-10-02.
- ↑ "Pros Take Marriage Vows at i. Jacobs' Denver Garden Rink". Billboard. The Billboard Publishing Company. 58 (35): 84. 1946-08-31. Retrieved 2010-10-02.
- ↑ "Denver Garden Spotlighted Via Roller Hockey B'Casts". Billboard Magazine. The Billboard Publishing Company. 59 (45): 71. 1947-11-15. Retrieved 2010-10-02.
- ↑ "Previous Sites for US National Figure Championships". USA Roller Sports. United States Olympic Committee. Retrieved 2010-10-02.
- ↑ "History of the Fillmore". The Fillmore Auditorium Official Website. huck Morris Presents / Bill Graham Presents. Archived from the original on 2005-02-07. Retrieved 2010-10-02.
Events and tenants | ||
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Preceded by McNichols Sports Arena Buffalo Memorial Auditorium |
Ultimate Fighting Championship venue UFC 2 Ultimate Ultimate 1995 |
Succeeded by Grady Cole Center Coliseo Rubén Rodríguez |