Filtering by: Mighty Wurlitzer
Organ Pops Concert Featuring Tony O'Brien
May
19
3:00 PM15:00

Organ Pops Concert Featuring Tony O'Brien

Doors - 2:00 PM 
Concert - 3:00 PM 
Tickets - $17 

 

The Detroit Theater Organ Society’s long running Organ Pops Concert series continues its 2024 season with yet another afternoon of songs and splendor at the Senate. This time around we’re combining the power of our Mighty Wurlitzer theater organ, (the eighth largest ever constructed) with the talents of veteran organist, Tony O’Brien! 

Don’t miss your chance to experience the majesty, nuance and diversity of sounds that only a theater pipe organ can provide. 

Whether you are a lifelong theater organ enthusiast or just a curious music lover, we hope to see you there! 

 

About the Artist: 

Hailing from the Detroit area, Mr. O’Brien is a trained theater organist with a degree in classical organ and many years of concert experience both domestically and internationally. It is this pedigree that provides him with the ability to create a diverse and technically impressive set of musical sounds at the organ console. His versatility allows him to both put on an exciting organ concert and accompany a silent film with the requisite timing and emotional resonance.  

The Senate Theater and The Detroit Theater Organ Society is supported by The Michigan Arts and Culture Council and The National Endowment for the Arts. 

Parking is available in our gated lot, on Gilbert, and Michigan Avenue

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Silents at the Senate Presents: The Thief of Bagdad
Jun
8
8:00 PM20:00

Silents at the Senate Presents: The Thief of Bagdad

Doors – 7:00 PM 

Film – 8:00 PM 

Tickets - $12 

2hr 34min | NR | Adventure/Fantasy | United States 

Live Organ Accompaniment by Andrew Rogers 

Presented with the Arab American National Museum and the Center for Arab Narratives 

 

 

Flying carpets! Monsters of land and sea! Crystal balls! Derring do! Immortal love! 

A GRAND ADVENTURE MADE ALL THE MORE MAGNIFICENT BY A LIVE ORGAN SCORE! 

Silents at the Senate, along with our partners at the Arab American National Museum and the Center for Arab Narratives, is proud to present the silent film classic, The Thief of Bagdad!

Organist Andrew Rogers will provide the magnificent musical accompaniment, playing our Mighty Wurlitzer theater pipe organ along with the film. enhancing the action and emotions on screen in real time. 

Few films are as extravagant, as romantic, as fantastic, or epic. With enormous sets, innovative special effects, and a cast of thousands, this loose adaptation of several stories from One Thousand and One Nights tells the tale of a thief named Ahmed—scoundrel turned hero, transformed by the power of love. In order to win the hand of his beloved princess, he must embark on a dangerous quest across vast distances, beset by gigantic beasts, mythical creatures, and sinister rivals. 

AN ENDURING, SWASHBUCKLING MASTERPIECE! 

Released at the height of Douglas Fairbanks’ career, the film cemented the star as a matinee idol of lavishly staged adventure films, a dazzling screen presence known for acrobatic stunts, physical prowess, and boyish charm. It was an enormous hit. Today, The Thief of Bagdad stands as a premier example of the art of silent filmmaking and has deeply influenced subsequent works inspired by or adapted from the folktales of One Thousand and One Nights.  

 

The Senate Theater and The Detroit Theater Organ Society is supported by The Michigan Arts and Culture Council and The National Endowment for the Arts 

 

Parking is available in a gated parking lot on Gilbert St., behind the theater.

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Silents at the Senate Presents: An Evening with Buster Keaton
May
11
8:00 PM20:00

Silents at the Senate Presents: An Evening with Buster Keaton

Doors – 7:00 PM 

Film – 8:00 PM 

Tickets - $12 

Shorts Program: The Goat (1921) and One Week (1920)  

48min | NR | Comedy | United States  

Feature: Sherlock Jr. (1924) 100th Anniversary Screening! 

45min | NR | Comedy/Fantasy | United States 

Live organ accompaniment by Dennis Scott

 

 

 

A season of Silents at the Senate would not be complete without the timeless pairing of cinema and physical comedy—SLAPSTICK!

With two classic shorts and one short feature directed and starring the most deadpan titan of silent comedy, An Evening with Buster Keaton is sure to delight.  

 

Irate cops stepping into open elevator shafts, a crudely assembled house with teetering walls, a movie screen turned into a doorway toward which a dreamer falls, searching for a way back to his beloved. Even after a century or more, his films—overflowing with physicality, absurdity, mischief, and even wonder—remain as captivating and hilarious as ever. They are . . .

PURE MOVIE MAGIC!

 

And their magic will be made all the more powerful by the internationally known silent film accompanist out of Chicago, Dennis Scott. At the console of our Mighty Wurlitzer theater pipe organ, Mr. Scott is sure to show off our instrument’s kaleidoscopic tonal color without ever showing up the images on the screen as he creates a live film score in real time, right before your very ears! 

A LIVE FILM SCORE IN REAL TIME, RIGHT BEFORE YOUR VERY EARS!

 

Be sure to stick around after the show for a chance to ask the organist a question and take a tour of the organ pipe chambers. This is a rare opportunity to get an up-close look at the inner workings of this marvelous musical machine! 

 

 

 

The Senate Theater and The Detroit Theater Organ Society is supported by The Michigan Arts and Culture Council and The National Endowment for the Arts 

Parking is available in a gated parking lot on Gilbert St., behind the theater.

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Organ Pops Concert Featuring Donnie Rankin
Apr
14
3:00 PM15:00

Organ Pops Concert Featuring Donnie Rankin

Sunday, April 14 

Doors - 2:00 PM 

Concert - 3:00 PM 

Tickets - $17 

 

The Detroit Theater Organ Society’s long running Organ Pops Concert series kicks off the 2024 season with yet another marvelous musical afternoon at the Senate. This time around we’re combining the power of our Mighty Wurlitzer theater organ, (the eighth largest ever constructed) with the talents of yet another rising star in the theater organ world, Donnie Rankin!

 

Don’t miss your chance to experience the majesty, nuance and diversity of sounds that only a theater pipe organ can provide. 

Whether you are a lifelong theater organ enthusiast or just a curious music lover, we hope to see you there! 

About the Artist: 

Donnie Rankin was born in Ravenna Ohio and was immediately immersed in music. After hearing his great-grandfather Don Sr. play the electronic organ at home, Donnie first took an interest in the theatre organ at the age of three when he heard the sounds of the Wurlitzer at the Civic Theatre in Akron, Ohio.

After building a musical foundation in the school band, at age 12 Donnie’s family acquired their own organ and he began taking formal lessons. Classical piano training followed at age 16, and his budding talent quickly blossomed into first rate musicianship.

Since then, Donnie has won several competitions and awards, including being named the Overall Winner of the American Theatre Organ Society's Young Theatre Organist Competition when he was 18. After his win in 2007, Donnie began a 5 year journey studying with noted organist Jelani Eddington.

In the course of his career, Donnie has performed for several ATOS annual conventions, and has played for theatre organ audiences around the world, including appearances in Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. In addition to performances, Donnie has presented playing clinics as part of the ATOS Summer Youth Adventure and at Indiana University Jacobs School of Music. His work as an organist and percussionist have been broadcast on countless stations including NPR, and BBC 2. In 2023 Donnie was named the American Theatre Organ Society's Organist of the Year. 

Donnie resides in Ravenna, Ohio where he runs a piano studio outside of his normal working hours. He remains on call as an organist at Cleveland’s Playhouse Square, and the Akron Civic Theatre.

The Senate Theater and The Detroit Theater Organ Society is supported by The Michigan Arts and Culture Council and The National Endowment for the Arts. 

Parking is available in a gated parking lot on Gilbert St., behind the theater.

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Silents at the Senate – The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928)
Mar
23
8:00 PM20:00

Silents at the Senate – The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928)

Doors – 7:00 PM 

Film – 8:00 PM 

Tickets - $12 

1hr 22min | NR | Historical Drama | France 

Live Organ Accompaniment by Scott Smith 

Presented in partnership with Cinema Lamont

 

 

Silents at the Senate and Cinema Lamont invite you to behold this singular film. An exaltation. An ode. A rousing picture of conspiracy, belief, and sacrifice. 

 

The Passion of Joan of Arc is a timeless artistic achievement, relentless in style and achingly evocative. It rightly stands as one of the finest films of all time.

Watch as an icon of women’s history transcends her era, the psychological drama of her final hours on screen. Listen as her struggle unfolds in bold imagery, invigorated by a live score from organist Scott Smith on the Senate Theater’s Mighty Wurlitzer pipe organ. 

 

Based on the actual medieval records of the trial and execution of Joan of Arc, Carl Th. Dreyer’s masterwork is nothing less than a cinematic reincarnation.

In the soulful visage of Renée Maria Falconetti the patron saint of France comes to life, shot in startling close-ups that aim to “interpret a hymn to the triumph of the soul over life." 

 

Experience it the way it was meant to be seen: in the communal atmosphere of a theater, the majestic sounds of a theater organ filling the room. It will be a true feast for the ears, eyes, and spirit. We hope to see you there! 

 

The Senate Theater and The Detroit Theater Organ Society is supported by The Michigan Arts and Culture Council and The National Endowment for the Arts 

Parking is available in a gated parking lot on Gilbert St., behind the theater.

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Silents at the Senate - Gloria Swanson in Queen Kelly (1932)
Feb
17
8:00 PM20:00

Silents at the Senate - Gloria Swanson in Queen Kelly (1932)

Sat. Feb. 17 

Doors – 7:00 PM 

Film – 8:00 PM 

Tickets - $12 

1hr 11min | NR | Drama/Romance | United States 

Live Organ Accompaniment by Lance Luce 
 

 

Depravity seizes upon poverty as extravagance collides with innocence in Queen Kelly,

a silent drama of doomed romance, presented with live musical accompaniment by Lance Luce on the Senate’s Mighty Wurlitzer theater organ! This incomplete but still captivating exercise in cinematic excess from director/screenwriter Erich von Stroheim proves that even an unfinished work from a master is still a masterwork. 

Co-produced by and starring Gloria Swanson, one of the silent era's biggest stars, what survives of the film tells the story of a playboy aristocrat who balks at his betrothal to his mad queen. On the eve of the marriage, he falls for an enchanting and fiery convent girl (Swanson) and then schemes to possess her, no matter the cost.  

In its existing form, the film presents a meticulously realized world in beautiful detail, a simple but sumptuous tale of worlds colliding—an ill-fated meeting that ends, (spoiler) in tragedy.  

But the epic and transgressive melodrama that could have been was never completed, itself a victim of incompatibility. But rather than a clash of class and circumstance, what doomed Queen Kelly from reaching its potential was the battle between art and business, the vision of an auteur versus censorship. 

Silents at the Senate is proud to present the 1932 release of this almost lost piece of silent film history!

Released only in Europe well into the “talkie” period, this is the most concise and cinematically pure version of the film. It features the so-called “Swanson” ending, filmed after the dismissal of Stroheim and shot two years after the abrupt end to the production due to massive cost overruns and the directors’ efforts to skirt the demands of censors. 

 

The Senate Theater and The Detroit Theater Organ Society is supported by The Michigan Arts and Culture Council and The National Endowment for the Arts. 

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Holiday Organ Concert Featuring Stephen Warner with Vocalist Rose Warner
Dec
10
3:00 PM15:00

Holiday Organ Concert Featuring Stephen Warner with Vocalist Rose Warner

Doors - 2:00 PM

Concert - 3:00 PM

Tickets - $17

'Tis the season to listen to holiday music, and there's no better instrument to provide that festive soundtrack than a Mighty Wurlitzer theater pipe organ. (Okay, we're biased, but we think you'll agree!) That's right, we're carrying on tradition by closing out the 2023 Organ Pops Concert series at the Senate with a Christmas concert! This year we are featuring the supremely talented, Stephen Warner, an indefatigable champion of the art of the pipe organ!

But you won't simply be able to listen to unique theater organ arrangements of seasonal tunes on one of the largest theater organs ever built. Those timeless melodies will also be accompanied by the vocal stylings of Rose Warner, who will be adding to that yuletide cheer with the incomparable beauty of the human voice.

About the Artist:

Stephen Warner is the organist at Jefferson Avenue Presbyterian Church in Detroit and a staff organist at the Michigan Theater in Ann Arbor. He grew up in Traverse City, Michigan, where he studied piano from age seven and participated in almost every facet of the Traverse City Public Schools music program.

In 2003, Mr. Warner completed dual bachelor’s degree in organ performance and in mechanical engineering at the University of Michigan. There, he had the opportunity to play the organ with many of the bands, orchestras and choirs, including the U of M Men’s Glee Club, which he was a member for 6 years. He studied organ primarily with Dr. James Kibbie and piano with Dr. Louis Nagel.

Mr. Warner studied engineering primarily due to his interest in organ building. He has had the privilege of working as an intern for John Brombaugh and Associates in Eugene, Oregon and now is an assistant for the Holden Pipe Organ Company in Ferndale, Michigan. Recently, Mr. Warner was awarded the David L. Junchen Technical Scholarship from the American Theater Organ Society. The summer of 2001 provided him with a unique study of the organ through a program called “Summer In French Organ Studies,” sponsored by the University of North Texas and the Bedient Pipe Organ Company. This program provided opportunities to perform on and learn the technical details of historic French instruments. This program has inspired Mr. Warner to consider a similar dual approach to studying the history of American instruments, particularly those of the 1920’s. The current application of this interest is in the creation of a fully illustrated book descibing the function and design of Jefferson Avenue Presbyterian's Skinner Organ. For this project, Mr. Warner has recieved the support of the Organ Historical Society through the awarding of the Mader Memorial Research Scholarship.

Mr. Warner has enjoyed a fruitful collaboration with his wife, Rose, singing with him in performances on both the classical and theater organ. He has also collaborated with long-time friend and saxophonist, Adam Olson, in recording and performing the works of vaudeville virtuoso, Rudy Wiedoeft. Lately, his performance focus has also turned to accompanying silent films, performing often at both the Senate and Redford theaters. Additionally, he has recently collaborated with banjo player Aaron Jonah Lewis on an upcoming album of traditional ragtime music entitled Ragtime Banjo Revival.

The Senate Theater and The Detroit Theater Organ Society, a non-profit and all-volunteer organization, is supported in part by The Michigan Arts and Culture Council and The National Endowment for the Arts. 

Parking is available in our gated lot, on Gilbert, and Michigan Avenue

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Organ Pops Concert Featuring Justin LaVoie
Nov
12
3:00 PM15:00

Organ Pops Concert Featuring Justin LaVoie

Doors – 2:00 PM

Concert – 3:00 PM

Tickets – $17

The Detroit Theater Organ Society is proud to present another afternoon of mighty sounds from the mightiest of instruments the (aptly named) Mighty Wurlitzer theater pipe organ!

That's right, it's another installment in our long-running Organ Pops Concert series at our home, the Senate Theater!

This time around we are pleased to host the 2020 American Theatre Organ Society Organist of Year, Justin LaVoie.

A native of Michigan, Mr. LaVoie has performed across the United States, dazzling audiences with his mastery of the instrument. Additionally, he has been featured on the nationally syndicated radio program Pipe Dreams and Steve Ashley’s Hot Pipes podcast.

There's no better way to experience and appreciate the full power and majesty of a theater organ than a live concert, and we can't wait to hear what Justin can do at the console.

We'll see you at the theater!

The Senate Theater and The Detroit Theater Organ Society is supported by The Michigan Arts and Culture Council and The National Endowment for the Arts. 

Parking is available in a gated parking lot on Gilbert St., behind the theater.

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Silents at the Senate – Charlie Chaplin’s The Kid (1921)
Nov
4
8:00 PM20:00

Silents at the Senate – Charlie Chaplin’s The Kid (1921)

Sat. Nov. 4 

Doors – 7:00 PM 

Film – 8:00 PM 

Tickets - $12 

1hr 8min | NR | Comedy/Drama | USA

Live Organ Accompaniment by Lance Luce
 

Brace yourselves for the magical and magnificent sounds of our Mighty Wurlitzer!  

It’s another installment of our ongoing silent film series, Silents at the Senate. This time we’re screening one of the most significant, well regarded, and beloved silent films, The Kid. Watch as Charlie Chaplin’s iconic face and physicality grace our screen. Listen as organist Lance Luce enhances the action with the Senate’s powerful theater organ. 

A poignant and charming mixture of pathos and playful comedy, The Kid is a masterwork in visual storytelling and one of the most financially and artistically successful films of the silent era.  

It should not be missed. 

Released in 1921, The Kid marks a turning point for Charlie Chaplin, who wrote, directed, produced, and starred in the film. Previously Chaplin had almost exclusively appeared in or directed short films, almost all of which were comedies. With The Kid, however, he set out to not only lengthen the runtime, but also break free from the constraints of pure comedy and create a perfect blend of what he termed, “raw slapstick and sentiment.” There was perhaps no better vessel to achieve that aim than through his beloved character, the Tramp. With his trademark ill-fitting clothes, silly mustache and clownish walk, Chaplin’s iconic vagrant had already delighted audiences for years. But never had he pulled so deliberately upon their heartstrings as he does in The Kid, which proclaims at the start to be, “a picture with a smile—and perhaps, a tear.” 

Which is exactly what our organ is built for. From comedy to melodrama, from epic and grandiose to idyllic and domestic, the theater organ is an instrument built to evoke the full spectrum of human emotion. But first and foremost, these instruments were built so that they might enhance the feelings a filmmaker endeavored to provoke within the viewer. Indeed, there is no better way to enjoy a silent film than with a theater organ, blasting air through its pipes and notes into your ears, blending its aural artistry seamlessly with the visual artistry on screen.  

We’ll see you at the theater! 

 

The Senate Theater and The Detroit Theater Organ Society is supported by The Michigan Arts and Culture Council and The National Endowment for the Arts. 

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Organ Pops Concert Featuring Dr. William Coale 
Sep
10
3:00 PM15:00

Organ Pops Concert Featuring Dr. William Coale 

Organ Pops Concert Featuring Dr. William Coale 

 

Sun. Sep. 10 

Doors – 2:00 PM 

Concert – 3:00 PM 

Tickets - $17



Our Organ Pops Concert series returns after a summer break for yet another concert in this decades long Senate Theater tradition. Our first of three concerts for the Fall/Winter 2023 season will feature Dr. William Coale on our Mighty Wurlitzer, making beautiful music befitting the majesty of our priceless instrument.


Dr. Coale is an experienced concert theater organist who has performed in concert in the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany and Sweden. Additionally, he is a scholar of the art of the instrument, having literally written volumes on legendary theater organist George Wright, a task that imbued him with a deep knowledge of the history of the instrument and its place in cinema history.


We hope to see you at the theater for yet another afternoon of amazing theater organ music!



The Senate Theater and The Detroit Theater Organ Society is supported by The Michigan Arts and Culture Council and The National Endowment for the Arts. 



Parking is available in a gated parking lot on Gilbert St., behind the theater.

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Silents at the Senate – Robin Hood (1922)
May
20
8:00 PM20:00

Silents at the Senate – Robin Hood (1922)

Silents at the Senate – Robin Hood (1922) 

 

Sat. May 20 

Doors – 7:00 PM 

Film – 8:00 PM 

Tickets – $12 

2hr 12min | NR | Adventure/Drama | USA 

Live Organ Accompaniment by Scott Smith 

 

It is a familiar tale.  

An absent king. A tyrannical prince. An evil sheriff. A band of merry men. A Lady named Marian. A champion of the people who steals from the rich and gives to the poor. 

 

It can only be Robin Hood. But not just any Robin Hood.  

 
Silents at the Senate is proud to present a silent film that is truly the equal of our Mighty Wurlitzer theater pipe organ. Its towering sets, baroque costumes, and exciting feats of derring-do have stood the test of time. And they will only stand taller with the marvelous musical wizardry of a theater organ at its side, played by the talented silent film accompanist, Scott Smith. 

 

Starring, co-written, and produced by silent screen titan, Douglas Fairbanks, this grandiose adaptation marked the first feature length screen appearance Robin Hood. Through its massive success the film firmly established a host of familiar story elements that would be repeated in later screen versions and cemented its star as a swashbuckling icon of the Roaring Twenties. The castle set alone covered ten acres in the then country setting of Hollywood, complementing the elaborate court pageantry that makes up much of the film’s first half. And when Douglas Fairbanks transforms into the acrobatic and mischievous folk hero, Robin Hood in the second half, the nearby woods of Hollywood serve as a convincing Sherwood Forest. 

 

So, join us, all ye merry moviegoers, for a night of action, adventure, and drama, with a live organ score to match the emotion of every minute! And remember to stick around after the show for a chance to ask the organist a question and take a tour of the organ pipe chambers. This is a rare opportunity to get an up-close look at the inner workings of this marvelous musical machine. 

 

The Senate Theater and The Detroit Theater Organ Society is supported by The Michigan Arts and Culture Council and The National Endowment for the Arts. 
 

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Organ Pops Concert Featuring David Marsh
May
14
3:00 PM15:00

Organ Pops Concert Featuring David Marsh

Theater Organist Mark herman

Doors - 2:00 PM

Concert - 3:00 PM

Tickets - $17


Our Organ Pops Concert series continues with organist David Marsh.

Mr. Marsh, hailing from southern California, has been playing the organ since the age of 14. He is an experienced performer, a passionate music educator, and a dedicated theater organ enthusiast. When he isn’t playing the organ in front of audiences or in his home, he gives private piano and organ lessons, serves as the president of the Orange County Theater Organ Society, and works as the executive assistant at the Los Angeles Organ Company.

The Detroit Theater Organ Society is proud to bring him to the Senate Theater to continue our tradition of presenting top-notch pops concerts on our Mighty Wurlitzer!


The Senate Theater and The Detroit Theater Organ Society is supported by The Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs and The National Endowment for the Arts

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Organ Pops Concert Featuring John Lauter
Apr
16
3:00 PM15:00

Organ Pops Concert Featuring John Lauter

Theater Organist Mark herman

Doors - 2:00 PM

Concert - 3:00 PM

Tickets - $17

The 2023 Organ Pops Concert series kicks off with a concert by the Detroit Theater Organ Society’s own, John Lauter!

Mr. Lauter, a professional organist with thirty-plus years of experience, has presented organ concerts in major cities across the United States and Canada. Additionally, he is a long-time church organist, an accomplished silent film accompanist, and can often be heard performing organ overtures before film screenings both at the Senate and Redford theaters in Detroit.

Come join us as we continue this six decades long tradition of organ pops concerts at the Senate!

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Silents at the Senate – Safety Last (1923) 100th Anniversary Screening
Apr
1
8:00 PM20:00

Silents at the Senate – Safety Last (1923) 100th Anniversary Screening

Theater Organist Mark herman

Silents at the Senate – Safety Last (1923) 100th Anniversary Screening 

 

Sat. Apr. 1 

Doors – 7:00 PM 

Film – 8:00 PM 

Tickets - $12 

1hr 20min | NR | Slapstick/Romance| USA  

Ask Father short film  

13min | NR | Slapstick/Romance| USA

Live Organ Accompaniment by Andrew Rogers


 

Harold Lloyd, one of the titans of silent slapstick comedy, was known for his exhilarating stunts, fast-paced chase scenes, and the high-energy, go-getting, bespectacled characters he so often played. He was also a man who lost a thumb and forefinger to a bomb mistaken for a prop and has been first and foremost remembered for this film, Safety Last.  

Go figure. 

Yes, Lloyd may have had a dubious commitment to safety. But if he played it safe, we might not have this opportunity to celebrate the centennial of his most famous work, featuring one of the most iconic sequences of all time. The film follows a small-town guy, (Lloyd) as he fumblingly attempts to make his way in the big city so that he can earn the hand of his sweetheart. In the course of this striving hijinks ensue, and at one point Lloyd scales a skyscraper and dangles perilously from the hands of its giant clock.  

So, what we’re saying is it’s a zany good time, made all the zanier by organist Andrew Rogers’ expert comedic timing at our Mighty Wurlitzer theater pipe organ! Which, according to Harold Lloyd himself, is exactly the kind of instrument to accompany his film. Lloyd once said, “I just don’t like pictures played with pianos. We never intended them to be played with pianos,” even refusing to allow screenings if an organ wasn’t available, an opinion we can’t help but appreciate. 

The show will also include the Harold Lloyd short film, Ask Father. And remember to stick around after the feature for a chance to ask the organist a question and take a tour of the organ pipe chambers. This is a rare opportunity to get an up-close look at the inner workings of this marvelous musical machine!  

 

 

The Senate Theater and The Detroit Theater Organ Society is supported by The Michigan Arts and Culture Council and The National Endowment for the Arts. 

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Alfred Hitchcock's Rope (1948) 75th Anniversary Screening
Mar
18
8:00 PM20:00

Alfred Hitchcock's Rope (1948) 75th Anniversary Screening

Theater Organist Mark herman

Rope (1948) 75th Anniversary Screening 

 

Sat. Mar. 18 

Doors – 7:00 PM 

Organ Overture – 7:30 PM 

Film – 8:00 PM 

Tickets - $6 

1hr 20min | PG | Crime/Thriller | USA 

 

It just takes a plan. A brilliant, meticulous plan, hatched within a brilliant, meticulous mind. With that, one could get away with just about anything . . . even murder.  

That, or you might just be able to pull off the impressive feat of film technique and dramatic flair that is Alfred Hitchcock’s Rope.  

In this classic bit of Hitchcock suspense, the action proceeds in real time, in long, fluid shots, entirely within the luxurious Manhattan apartment of Brandon Shaw and Philip Morgan, two wealthy and sophisticated young men. Brandon and Philip are throwing a small dinner party but with one guest conspicuously absent — their “friend” David, who they strangled in the opening shot and stashed inside the large wooden chest around which all the other guests wonder, “where can he be?” And they did it for the simple reason of proving that they could get away with it, on account of their, “superiority.” 

Loosely based on the Leopold and Loeb murder of 1924, Rope is a cinematic experiment about an intellectual exercise taken to the ultimate, violent extreme. It stars Hitchcock regular and Hollywood legend, James Stewart alongside a chilling John Dall and an unravelling Farley Granger as the murderous hosts.  

Don’t let yourself be the one who everyone is missing, and make sure you make it to see Rope at the Senate! 

 

The Senate Theater and The Detroit Theater Organ Society is supported by The Michigan Arts and Culture Council and The National Endowment for the Arts. 

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Silents at the Senate - Alfred Hitchcock's The Lodger (1927)
Mar
11
8:00 PM20:00

Silents at the Senate - Alfred Hitchcock's The Lodger (1927)

Theater Organist Mark herman

Silents at the Senate – The Lodger (1927) with live accompaniment by Dennis Scott  

 

Sat. Mar. 11 

Doors – 7:00 PM 

Film – 8:00 PM 

Tickets - $12 

1hr 30min | NR | Thriller/Mystery | United Kingdom 
 

 

A man, accused. A blonde in distress. A cameo appearance. This might be a Hitchcock film! 

Considered by the master of suspense himself as the first “true” Hitchcock picture, the silent mystery/thriller The Lodger stands as the director’s first fully formed statement of artistic intent. Only his third feature film, it includes nearly all of the visual obsessions and techniques that would become his trademark. Inspired by the German Expressionist films of the 1920s, Hitchcock endeavored to further develop the visual language of cinema using striking and unusual camera angles, high contrast lighting, and placing actors intentionally within the frame to evoke an emotion or guide the viewer towards a conclusion. An influential film, it was an essential steppingstone in the development of the modern thriller genre. 

The action centers on the golden-haired fashion model, Daisy Bunting, her parents, and Jonathan Drew, their mysterious new lodger. An alluring and moody young man, Jonathan soon draws the attention of Daisy. A burgeoning romance begins. But to the dismay of her parents, (and would-be suitor, the local policeman) this captivating new arrival happens to match the description of a murderer on the loose — a serial killer with a taste for blondes! 

And, as if this suspenseful scenario isn’t enticing enough, we’re serving up these vintage Hitchcockian thrills with the period appropriate sounds of our Mighty Wurlitzer theater pipe organ. At the console this time around will be the internationally known silent film accompanist out of Chicago, Dennis Scott. A master of his art, Mr. Scott is sure to show off our instrument’s kaleidoscopic tonal color without ever showing up the images on the screen. Be sure to stick around after the show for a chance to ask the organist a question and take a tour of the organ pipe chambers. This is a rare opportunity to get an up-close look at the inner workings of this marvelous musical machine!  

 

 

The Senate Theater and The Detroit Theater Organ Society is supported by The Michigan Arts and Culture Council and The National Endowment for the Arts. 

 

 

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Silents at the Senate - It (1927)
Feb
11
8:00 PM20:00

Silents at the Senate - It (1927)

Theater Organist Mark herman

Silents at the Senate – It (1927) with live accompaniment by John Lauter

 

Sat. Feb. 11 

Doors – 7:00 PM 

Film – 8:00 PM 

Tickets - $12 

1hr 12min | NR | Romantic Comedy | USA 
 

 

Clara Bow? She’s got “it.”  

What’s “it?” Well, if you have to ask, you probably wouldn’t even know a tomato if she flew right at your face. Ya follow? 

But thankfully we have a remedy for your ignorance. Just watch the 1927 romantic comedy, It, starring the charismatic flapper screen idol, Clara Bow. You’ll get the picture. She’s the cat’s pajamas!  

Bow plays Betty Lou Spence, a salesgirl with pluck to spare, who falls for her boss, Cyrus Waltham Jr.  He’s a real spiffy guy. The bee’s knees. But he’s also a high pillow from high society with more scratch than he knows what to do with, placing him well out of her league. Will Betty Lou find a way to overcome class differences and make love conquer all? 

You betcha! And you’ll be sure to laugh all the way. Meanwhile, you’ll be swaying to the rhythm of this jazz-age gem, accompanied by organist John Lauter on the Senate’s Mighty Wurlitzer theater pipe organ, which was first played just one year after the release of the film. Be sure to stick around after the show for a chance to ask the organist a question and take a tour of the organ pipe chambers. This is a rare opportunity to get an up-close look at the inner workings of this marvelous musical machine!  

 

 

The Senate Theater and The Detroit Theater Organ Society is supported by The Michigan Arts and Culture Council and The National Endowment for the Arts. 

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Holiday Organ Concert Featuring Nathan Avakian with Vocalist Claire Avakian
Dec
11
3:00 PM15:00

Holiday Organ Concert Featuring Nathan Avakian with Vocalist Claire Avakian

Theater Organist Mark herman

Holiday Organ Concert Featuring Nathan Avakian with Vocalist Claire Avakian

Doors - 2:00 PM
Concert - 3:00 PM
Tickets - $17

'Tis the season to listen to holiday music, and there's no better instrument to provide that festive soundtrack than a Mighty Wurlitzer theater pipe organ. (Okay, we're biased, but we think you'll agree!) That's right, we're carrying on our tradition of closing out the 2022 Organ Pops Concert series at the Senate with a Christmas concert! This year we are featuring the mega-talented Nathan Avakian.

But you won't simply be able to listen to unique theater organ arrangements of seasonal tunes on one of the largest theater organs ever built. Those timeless melodies will also be accompanied by the vocal stylings of Nathan's sister, Claire Avakian who will be adding to that yuletide cheer with the incomparable beauty of the human voice.

We hope to see all you organ enthusiasts and organ curious folks there!

About the Artist:

Nathan is a songwriter, film composer, and organist based in New York City. Known for his unique blending of virtual instrument technology with organ music, Nathan’s live performances satisfy contemporary musical tastes and pay tribute to the historical legacy of the pipe organ.

Nathan’s fascination with the pipe organ began at age four with a visit to the Portland Organ Grinder, a restaurant featuring live pop music played on a massive theatre organ with all of its mechanics exposed. At age eleven he began nine years of private organ
studies.

Since winning the American Theatre Organ Society Young Organist Competition in 2009, Nathan has provided pipe organ entertainment across the United States and internationally. He has released several albums featuring theatre and classical pipe organs as well as virtual orchestrations.

As resident organist and composer for the International Youth Silent Film Festival, Nathan creates music that inspires young filmmakers around the world as they reinvent the art of
silent film.

Nathan scores historic silent films for Thanhouser Company Film Preservation as well as contemporary films by various filmmakers. His music has recently been featured in web series including Makers Who Inspire (Henry Thong) and The Creative Quarantine Sessions (Alex Whittenberg).

Nathan also has a growing collection of piano and organ compositions to his credit including “At The Square,” commissioned to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Jersey Journal publication in 2017.

In 2020 Nathan and his sister Claire started a songwriting business called Passing Notes, writing and producing personalized songs for customers and their loved ones.

For more information about Nathan’s music, visit www.avakianmusic.com

The Senate Theater and The Detroit Theater Organ Society is supported by The Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs and The National Endowment for the Arts

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Organ Pops Concert Featuring Alex Jones
Nov
13
3:00 PM15:00

Organ Pops Concert Featuring Alex Jones

Theater Organist Mark herman

Organ Pops Concert Featuring Alex Jones

Doors - 2:00 PM
Concert - 3:00 PM
Tickets - $17

This Fall the Detroit Theater Organ Society is proud to continue our long running Organ Pops Concert series. For decades we have presented the best theater organists around for your listening pleasure, performing live in the Senate Theater on our one-of-a-kind Mighty Wurlitzer theater pipe organ. On November 13, the talented-beyond-his-years, Alex Jones will be gracing our stage and your ears.

Originally from London, Alex is currently a candidate for the Doctor of Musical Arts Degree at the University of Houston’s Moores School of Music where he studies with Prof. Daryl Robinson and holds a Graduate Teaching Fellowship in the Musicology department. He is a graduate of the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, NY holding a Masters Degree in Organ Performance & Literature from the studio of Edoardo Bellotti. He earned his Bachelors’ Degree in Organ Performance with Honours at the Royal Birmingham Conservatoire studying under Henry Fairs & Daniel Moult.

He began his career by gaining a scholarship to study at Chetham’s School of Music in Manchester, UK where he also held the Junior Organ Scholarship at Manchester Cathedral. Whilst in Manchester, he appeared in concert with the Chetham’s Symphony Orchestra at The Bridgewater Hall, The Royal Northern College of Music & Selby Abbey. As an undergraduate, he was awarded the Anne & Don Smith Memorial Organ Scholarship to Town Hall & Symphony Hall, Birmingham and was awarded the William Taylor Recital Prize. He was also awarded a grant from the Birmingham Organists’ Association Leonard Gibbons Fund.

Upon relocating to the United States, he has been the recipient of numerous awards and prizes including the Third Prize at the 2022 Elizabeth B. Stephens International Organ Competition in Atlanta GA, the Second Prize at the 2017 West Chester University International Organ Competition in West Chester PA, the First Prize in the 2017 American Theatre Organ Society’s National Competition and the Third Prize in the 2018 Royal College of Organists National Competition in the UK. He has given performances of Francis Poulenc’s Concerto for Organ, Strings and Timpani as a soloist and has appeared with internationally renowned Early Music ensemble Ars Lyrica Houston at the Hobby Center for the Performing Arts in Houston TX. He has also performed with Publick Musick at the University of Rochester’s Memorial Art Gallery. He appeared as a guest soloist for the 2018 Lynchburg International Organ Festival in Lynchburg, VA and was awarded the Robert Carwithen Scholarship in recognition for excellence in the field of church music.

Alex is also a professional theatre organist and has appeared as a featured artist at the 2018 & 2019 American Theatre Organ Society National Conventions in Los Angeles, CA and Rochester, NY respectively. He has toured extensively throughout New York state having given concerts at the Auditorium Theatre in Rochester, the Empire Theatre in Syracuse, the Riviera Theatre in North Tonawanda and the Forum Theatre in Binghamton. He has also appeared at the John Dickinson High School in Wilmington, DE for the Dickinson Theatre Organ Society’s 49th Anniversary Season, Grant Union High School in Sacramento, CA and the Tampa Theatre in Florida.

As a classical recitalist, he has performed around Europe making appearances in France, Germany and The Netherlands. He has also given solo recitals in major venues in London including St. Paul’s Cathedral, Westminster Central Hall, St. John Smith Square and St. Stephen Walbrook, as well as having performed at Lichfield Cathedral, St. Philip’s Cathedral in Birmingham, Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge & Peterborough Cathedral. In 2014, he was invited as a guest speaker to appear at London’s Southbank Centre for the “Pulling Out The Stops” festival celebrating the re-inauguration of the famous Royal Festival Hall organ and has appeared in masterclasses with Olivier Latry, David Briggs, Wayne Marshall, Dame Gillian Weir, Bine Bryndorf & Pieter van Dijk. He is a published author, having contributed an article to the 2018 American Organ Historical Society Convention Journal.

Alex has previously held positions as Organist and Director of Music at St. Louis Catholic Church in Memphis, TN and as an assistant organist at St. George’s Episcopal Church in Germantown, TN and All Saints Episcopal Church in Tupelo, MS. He is currently the Organist & Choirmaster at Trinity Episcopal Church in Houston, TX.

We hope to see all you organ enthusiasts and organ curious folks there!

The Senate Theater and The Detroit Theater Organ Society is supported by The Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs and The National Endowment for the Arts

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Silents at the Senate – Flesh and the Devil (1926)
Nov
5
8:00 PM20:00

Silents at the Senate – Flesh and the Devil (1926)

Silents at the Senate closes out the Fall season with Flesh and the Devil, a film so intense with emotion – swinging from youthful cheer and love, to uninhibited lust, jealousy, and wrath – that we may need to keep the lights off in the theater for a minute after the movie.  

You'll need some time to collect yourself.   

Sat. Nov. 5
Doors – 7:00 PM
Film – 8:00 PM
Tickets - $12
1hr 52min | NR | Melodrama/Romance | USA

This enduring silent classic deftly blends light comedy, steamy romance, and tragic melodrama, making our Mighty Wurlitzer theater organ, unparalleled in its versatility, the perfect instrument for providing musical accompaniment. As the film takes you on this journey of agony and passion, organist John Lauter will be there to compliment and intensify the feelings with his live organ score.  

Starring romantic screen idols Greta Garbo and John Gilbert, Flesh and the Devil was and still remains a shocking and trailblazing film with visual style and stirring performances. Calling to mind the erotic thrillers of the 1980s like Fatal Attraction, this movie sizzles. The chemistry between its stars, who began a real love affair during shooting, cannot be denied. Meanwhile the camera titillates with then unheard-of close-ups of open mouth kisses and horizontal love scenes, while evocative flourishes of light and shadow heighten the dazzling eroticism of the drama.   

You will hardly believe what they were allowed to put on screen in the old days.  

And seeing it the way it was intended to be seen, on the big screen with live organ accompaniment, is a cinematic and musical time-traveling experience you won’t soon forget. Plus, as an added bonus, you can stick around after the show for a chamber tour, a rare chance to get an up-close look at the inner workings of a theater pipe organ. 

See you at the theater! 

 

Silents at the Senate is supported by the Knight Arts Challenge 

The Senate Theater and The Detroit Theater Organ Society is supported by The Michigan Arts and Culture Council and The National Endowment for the Arts.

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Organ Pops Concert Featuring Lance Luce
Sep
11
3:00 PM15:00

Organ Pops Concert Featuring Lance Luce

Theater Organist Mark herman

Organ Pops Concert Featuring Lance Luce

Doors - 2:00 PM

Concert - 3:00 PM

Tickets - $17

Lance Luce is an internationally acclaimed theater organist. He has played hundreds of concerts all over the United States, Canada, England, and Australia. In 2014 he was awarded Organist of the year by the American Theatre Organ Society. Most Recently he became the head organist for the Detroit Red Wings at the new Little Caesar’s Arena in Detroit.

He has played concerts for numerous chapters of the American Theatre Organ Society and other affiliated theater organ groups and clubs. He has played for National and regional conventions of the ATOS in the United States and TOSA in Australia.

At age 18 Lance won first place honors in the Yamaha National Electone organ competition in California.

The next year he was appointed the Head Staff Organist at Radio City Music Hall in New York, on the largest Wurlitzer ever built.

Lance has been a church organ consultant in Michigan since 1991. He is currently the church organ consultant for Allen organs. He is also on the Allen Artist roster. Lance has designed and installed over 350 organs in churches, homes, and institutions. His background includes pipe organ maintenance, as well as electronic organ design, installation, voicing, pipe interfacing and MIDI implementation.

Today he is on the staff at the Fox Theatre and Redford Theater in Detroit, and the Michigan Theater in Ann Arbor. He has been a church organist for 45 years and is currently at Cross of Christ Lutheran Church in Bloomfield Hills.

The Senate Theater and The Detroit Theater Organ Society is supported by The Michigan Council for Arts and Cultural Affairs and The National Endowment for the Arts

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